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.”

Still Waiting for Doherty’s Uncommon Integrity


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Brendan Doherty demonstrating uncommon integrity

Aside from holding political persuasions that would – in my opinion – be bad for Rhode Island, Brendan Doherty may well be a good, honest guy. I don’t know as I haven’t met him. But I do know this, his campaign for Congress is not exhibiting “uncommon integrity” as the Republican often claims.

In fact, in his quest for a seat in Congress Doherty is engaging in the same exact type of half-truths and maybe even outright lies that he says his opponent David Cicilline did in the last election.

I’ve been banging this drum in relation to his lackluster Politifact record – which as of today counts as many lies as truths and also as many half-truths and mostly falses as mostly trues. Uncommon integrity is George Washington not being able to tell a lie, not Brendan Doherty lying as often as he tells the truth.

But it occurred to me again when I saw this Doherty attack ad that distorts Cicilline’s now famous “city is in excellent financial condition” whopper.

Doherty’s ad says Cicilline “mismanaged municipal finances” juxtaposed over the words “Budget Deficit of $109 million.” David Cicilline did not mismanage municipal finances to the tune of $109 million. What actually happened is Brendan Doherty’s political godfather Don Carcieri cut off state aid to cities, causing huge deficits in every urban area of Rhode Island, including the state capital. David Cicilline may have fudged the facts, but it was Don Carcieri who made it happen.

There’s no defending what David Cicilline said about Providence’s fiscal situation, and I don’t begrudge Brendan Doherty for using it to his political advantage. But running a campaign under the mantle of uncommon integrity comes with certain responsibilities, one of which is to display uncommon integrity. Doherty’s campaign has yet to do so … in fact, so far it’s been more like politics as usual.

Dems Say Doherty Fell Short on Pro-Women Bill

In light of congressional candidate Brendan Doherty’s Women for Doherty rally tonight, the Rhode Island Democratic Party today questioned Doherty for not supporting legislation that would expand and reauthorize the Violence Against Women Act. Specifically, the party questions Doherty’s unwillingness to expand and strengthen protections to Native American women, members of the LGBT community and immigrants.

On April 26, the Senate passed the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act (S.1925) by a vote of 68-31 that extended protections to Native Americans, undocumented immigrants and members of the LGBT community. Even though thirteen female senators, Republican and Democrat, called upon House Speaker John Boehner to pass the Senate’s legislation, the House GOP passed its own reauthorization that excluded these expanded protections. The VAWA expired without Congress reaching consensus and the Republican-led House left town without passing a strengthened, bipartisan VAWA reauthorization.

In comments published in a Sept. 16 column in the Providence Journal, Doherty would only voice his support for the Violence Against Women Act in its current version, but was unwilling to support legislation to also expand and strengthen protections for Native Americans, immigrants and members of the LGBT community. If members of Congress want to add protections for people in other walks of life, that’s fine, but submit another bill,” Doherty told the Journal.

“Brendan Doherty talks about being bipartisan and the need to compromise, but with his comments dismissing people ‘in other walks of life,’ he is siding with the Republican right, even though every Republican female senator, among several Republican senators, voted for a bipartisan compromise on this issue,” said Rhode Island Democratic Chairman Ed Pacheco. “We want to send a message to Mr. Doherty that actions speak louder than words.

“As the Rhode Island Coalition Against Domestic Violence launches their ‘No More’ campaign and given that October is National Domestic Violence Awareness month, now is a great time for Mr. Doherty to clearly explain his reservations about protecting some women, but not all women, from domestic violence,” Pacheco said. “The Democratic Party believes that protection should be extended to all women, and Senate Democrats, along with many Republicans, voted for that this spring.  Most Americans understand that domestic violence is domestic violence – period – and it’s not a less important issue for any individual.

“Voters have every reason to be concerned about Mr. Doherty’s position on this important issue,” Pacheco concluded. “Unfortunately, Mr. Doherty has chosen to stand with the House Republican leadership above the needs of victims of domestic violence.”

Hinckley: ‘Abolish Department of Education’


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Barry Hinckley might think the polls predicting his political demise are flawed, but according to Occam’s Razor – the theory that the simplest reason is probably the correct one – no conspiracy theory or professional blunder needs to have occurred in order to explain his poor performance among likely voters.

The simplest theory as to why poll respondents didn’t give Hinckley very high marks is because his ideas are out of step with what Rhode Islanders want.

He’s a supporter of Paul Ryan’s draconian budget proposal, which would bleed Medicare dry and privatize social security.

And if that isn’t out-of-step enough for you, consider his recent statement on WJAR’s Sunday morning News Conference show that he “would abolish the Department of Education.”

Rhode Islanders don’t want that to happen!

The state gets about $230 million a year in federal funds from the Department of Education, or about 12 percent of its overall education dollars, according to Elliot Krieger, a spokesman for the state Department of Education. Both Providence and Central Falls get about 20 percent of their public education budgets from the federal government, he added.

“Federal funds pay for many initiatives, most notably Title I (aid to high-poverty schools and districts), Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (funds for students with disabilities, in both public and nonpublic schools), and school nutrition programs (some of which comes from the Dept. of Agriculture),” Krieger said in an email.

Elimination of the Department of Education would be a disaster, though some of Hinckley’s disinterested out-of-state donors who don’t care what happens to Rhode Island might not mind if our children don’t have access to good schools.

And, it should be pointed out, that Barry Hinckley is well within his rights to run for Senate under the mantle of representing the elite rather than the Ocean State.

But he’s applying faulty reasoning when he suggests polls depicting his unpopularity are indicative of anything other than exactly that. Indeed, logical practically dictates that someone who espouses such views wouldn’t poll well here, where we place a high value on retirement security, medical care for the elderly and a quality public education for our kids.

Doherty Distances Himself from 47 Percent Remark


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Brendan Doherty

Brendan Doherty has distanced himself from Mitt Romney’s politically devastating comments about the 47 percent, according to the Providence Journal.

“I don’t agree with Mitt Romney’s characterization,” Doherty said in a statement to the ProJo.

Exactly what part of Romney’s diatribe against income tax-less moochers with no personal responsibility Doherty disagrees with wasn’t clear. He didn’t actually talk to the reporter, John Mulligan, rather Doherty just sent a press release about it, it seems.

But at least Mulligan got a release. I made several overtures to the Doherty campaign and they ignored them all. (And Dave Layman and I are friends!) It’s almost as if Doherty disdains progressives the way Romney does the 47 percent.

What is clear is what Doherty, who has endorsed Romney for president, has said about him in the past: “Mitt Romney is a proven leader who will stand by his convictions while seeking consensus to find real solutions to the daunting challenges facing our nation.”

It’s hard to make the case that Romney is a consensus builder after he got caught on video saying “my job is is not to worry about those people. I’ll never convince them they should take personal responsibility and care for their lives.”

It’s also going to be hard for Doherty to make the case that he doesn’t share Romney’s belief that poor people are lazy and lucky. Especially when he then campaigns with other right-wing Republicans like Devin Nunes, about whom Democratic Party spokesman Bill Fischer said, “Nunes has described Medicaid as a program ‘imposed on the poor’ and has stood with Paul Ryan in support of radically altering the safety net for our seniors.”

Similarly, Doherty wants to repeal Obamacare but extend George Bush’s tax cuts for the rich.

Doherty may say he doesn’t agree with Romney’s off-color comments about the 47 percent, but if elected you can bet he would vote as if he agrees with them.

Cicilline Leads Doherty in Third Poll Since Primary


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A third poll since the primary shows Congressman David Cicillne with a comfortable lead over conservative newcomer Brendan Doherty, this one was commissioned by the Cicilline campaign and shows him enjoying a 51 to 41 edge over right wing Republican.

“Democrat David Cicilline has secured majority support over Republican challenger Brendan Doherty in the race for Rhode Island’s First Congressional seat,” said a memo from pollster Diane Feldman, of the Feldman Group, to the Cicilline campaign. “With only 8 percent undecided, the contest is not very mobile and Cicilline is the likely winner of it.”

Accounting for three-way race, “Cicilline leads Doherty 46 percent to 36 percent, with independent candidate David Vogel receiving 7 percent and 11 percent of voters undecided,” according to her memo.

The results closely mimic a recent poll conducted by the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, which showed Cicilline with an 11-point lead over Doherty.

Feldman’s memo says, “Voters favor Democratic positions on many key issues facing the country, including health care reform. Seventy-two (72) percent of voters in the First Congressional District support the Democratic position favoring the Affordable Care Act, while 22 percent of voters favor the Republican position of repealing the Affordable Care Act completely, and starting the process of health care reform all over again.”

Doherty has said he is opposed to Obama’s landmark healthcare reform bill.

“The First Congressional District remains heavily Democratic,” Feldman wrote in her memo. “President Barack Obama dominates Republican challenger Mitt Romney and fully 50 percent of voters believe their families are better off if Democrats have a majority in the United States Congress, while only 16 percent of voters feel their families are be better off if Republicans have a majority.”

Doherty’s Campaign Is Being Untrustworthy


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Brendan Doherty

So far Brendan Doherty is running his campaign against David Cicilline not all that differently from how Anthony Gemma campaigned against the incumbent congressman: make a lot of accusations and see which ones stick.

So far, not all of them have.

While the conservative Republican got a lot of media attention the day after the primary for his announcing Cicilline’s ten biggest deceptions, it turns out Doherty was the one doing the deceiving with regard to at least 20 percent of the list.  The Providence Journal Politifact team has looked into two of the ten accusations Doherty made about Cicilline and found them both to be “mostly false.”

In the first, Doherty accuses Cicilline of intentionally missing deadlines for an audit of Providence finances. Politifact says, “The facts argue otherwise. In the end, we have the former head of the Rhode Island State Police making allegations without key evidence, and ignoring evidence that points in another direction.”

In the second piece, Doherty tries to make the assertion that a former campaign worker didn’t repay a loan to the Providence Economic Development Partnership. According to Politifact, the borrower paid back 93 percent of the loan after defaulting on it. “Doherty cited the case as one of Cicilline’s “most serious deceptions.” It’s not clear that any deception was involved. And Doherty provided no such evidence. Because the statement contains some element of truth but ignores critical facts that would give a different impression, we rate it Mostly False.”

Brendan Doherty’s baggage is supposed to be that he is a conservative Republican who will side with other conservative Republicans in congress. But Politifact has examined his statements four times so far and he’s been less-than-spot-on in three of them. Not what you want the paper of record writing about you if you’re waging a trust campaign.

Here’s what Doherty said at his presser about the value of being honest: “You have shown yourself to be untrustworthy and therefore unqualified to represent the people of Rhode Island.”

Remembering September 11


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Today, my thoughts are with all those who lost family and friends on September 11, 2001 during the terrorist attacks on our country.  Despite the passage of time, I am sure that those who lost loved ones continue to suffer unspeakable pain and they should continue to remain in our thoughts and prayers.
I am especially mindful of the brave first responders who lost their own lives while bringing aid to the victims.  Today reminds all of us that we should never take our freedoms for granted. America is safer than we were 11 years ago – we are more vigilant as a nation and better equipped to respond to emerging threats – and this is because of the brave men and women in uniform who are serving our country all over the world.  I thank them for their sacrifice and the sacrifice of their families.

Whither the Ron Paul Voter


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Did you hear about how Ron Paul was snubbed at the Republican National Convention? (snubbed video)

Ron Paul has said he won’t be running for President again, or Congress for that matter. Whatever his imperfections, I will miss the guy, and I’m not alone. The question is what will become of his many followers.

It’s safe to say that Libertarian Gary Johnson will be on the ballot in Rhode Island, and that he’ll pick up some of the votes that Paul would have gotten if he were on it. Other Paul voters will be divvied up between Romney, Obama, Jill Stein, or perhaps most likely not show up to vote. I fear in particular that many of his young supporters will simply opt out.

Ron Paul’s anti-Fed, pro-peace, and pro-legalization stances have garnered him a large and enthusiastic youth following, and it would be unfortunate to lose it from political engagement. It doesn’t help that the other champion of these causes, Dennis Kucinich, has himself been pushed out of Congress. The last real hope for leadership on these taboo policies is Bernie Sanders in the Senate, and he is no spring chicken himself. Who will keep the independent minded voters involved when all their heroes are gone?

Well, I can’t speak for the rest of the races in the country, but I can offer Paul voters some solace here in District 2. On November 6th, there will be a Congressional candidate who will work for Federal Reserve System accountability and reform,  support the legalization of cannabis, work for peace, and call for an audit of the Pentagon. That candidate is me, and if you’re interested in learning more about my platform, I encourage you to visit my website and follow me on facebook and twitter.

Local Media Enabled Gemma’s Recklessness


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Anthony Gemma continues his scorched-earth quest for the Democratic nomination for Congress in District 1, and local reporters are helping to do the scorching.

Look at all the great headlines he’s gotten out of allegations that amount to nothing:

Golocalprov.com: “Gemma Accuses Cicilline of Voter Fraud“, “Cicilline Aides Named in Gemma’s Accusations“, “Gemma to Call on Cicilline to Resign Today.”  Providence Journal: “Gemma sets up ‘tip hotline’ in voter fraud probe“, “In secretly recorded video, an offer to deliver absentee ballot votes for money“, “RI Congressional Candidate sent ballot fraud complaint to a campaign finance commission“, “Republican congressional candidate Doherty ‘troubled’ by allegations against opponent Cicilline“, “Gemma to detail findings at noon of probe into voter fraud“, “Gemma campaign hired Warwick detective firm to look into voter fraud“.

The morning after Gemma’s press conference where he let these charges fly, the Journal actually had this headline:  “Gemma alleges voter fraud; Cicilline denies accusation.”  This was after a press conference where not a shred of evidence was presented to make the link, despite a couple of weeks’ worth of promises otherwise.

The stories behind these headlines did not appear out of the air, though lots of them did begin with press releases from the Gemma campaign. These stories were written by real writers, with real names, like Philip Marcelo, John Mulligan, Kathy Gregg, and Zachary Malinowski of the Providence Journal and Dan McGowan of golocalprov.com, Dan Jaehnig and Katie Davis of Channel 10, and more.

Let’s be clear, too. There has been no evidence presented for these allegations beyond the allegations themselves. To me, they seem the invention of a few people who appear to want to seem like players, and relentlessly (and effectively) flogged by Gemma.

If you’ve been around politics in RI for any length of time, you’ve met some of these people. They want you to know how important they are and how worldly, i.e. cynical. They tell you fabulous stories about corruption and influence and the things they’ve seen that would curl your hair, and so on. The real purpose of these tales is not the transfer of information, but the aggrandizement of the teller in the eyes of the gullible. After all, only someone with connections would be privy to such wild tales.

In truth, I doubt that the reporters who have been writing these stories are all that gullible, but it is undeniable fact that the stories they have written and the headlines laid on those stories have abetted the dirty and unprincipled campaign strategy Anthony Gemma has chosen. He has successfully taken an idiotic story of no news value except as it reflects on his own judgment, and turned it into weeks of headlines. And it wasn’t the partisan media — the John DePetros and Travis Rowleys of the state — who helped him most effectively. It was the leaders of the mainstream press who kept the story alive, teasing Gemma’s “tell-all” press conference, broadcasting his videos, reprinting his press releases about how much he’d spent on the probe.  However skeptical they style themselves, they have done his bidding.

The allegations themselves are ridiculous. Please remember that the Mayoral elections in question, in 2002 and 2006, were not close races. In the 2002 Democratic primary, Cicilline won a clear majority in a 4-way race and went on to win the general election with 84% of the vote. In 2006 he faced only token opposition in the primary and general elections, and won 83% of the vote.  None of these outcomes were in any doubt at the time, though David Igliozzi, Keven McKenna, and Joe Paolino may remember the 2002 primary somewhat differently than I do.

The “Larger Story”

What of the larger story?  The idea that these allegations buttress what we already “know” about Cicilline’s dishonesty?  These mostly stem from the chaos of Providence’s budget during 2010, when the state slashed a tremendous amount of aid to the city in the final quarter of the fiscal year and when the City Council refused to ratify a budget until after some of the savings it anticipated were impossible to achieve.

I’ve looked into that story about David Cicilline’s management of Providence’s finances and found little there beyond widespread confusion about the difference between a budget reserve and a cash reserve, along with a collection of city and state officials who all saw political advantage in blaming the recently departed Mayor for problems most of them had a hand in creating.

There was also the matter of a single poorly chosen word by Cicilline who I choose to excuse for that because the cash reserves that got the city through its vicious cuts in state funding were built up under his administration. (Did you think they were a legacy of the Cianci years?)  I might not have used the word “excellent”, but I do think it obvious that only a city in good financial shape could have gotten through the “Category 5” fiscal storm created by those aid cuts in 2008, 2009, and 2010.

What’s more incredible to me is that all the criticism revolves around the claim that Mayor Cicilline should have raised taxes sooner and farther, the “hard choices” recommended by former Carcieri aide Gary Sasse who was commissioned by the City Council to write a report about the issue. I’m certainly not going to defend every decision Cicilline ever made, but people who imagine his mandate did not involve holding the line on property taxes by any means at hand are apparently living on a different planet than me. He held taxes down, and now gets blame for that?  The fact remains that David Cicilline has been tarred far beyond his share in order that the people actually responsible for Providence’s troubles can evade blame.

We’ve seen this show before

 What’s going on here is only slightly different than the way the mainstream press invented all the narratives about Al Gore’s “lies” in 1999 and 2000, and then allowed George Bush and the partisan media to take advantage of them. You know the list, about the internet, Love Story, Love Canal, and all the rest. Each of those was an invention of writers at the New York Times, the Washington Post, and the Associated Press. All the Bush campaign had to do was gently pile on, which they happily did.

In almost exactly the same way, what’s happened here is that reporters have taken claims by interested parties — Providence City Council members, General Assembly insiders, ex-Governors and members of their staff — at face value, and helped invent a narrative about a dishonest Cicilline. These were all people who played a part in Providence’s fiscal nightmare, but by deflecting blame to the former Mayor, they can avoid it themselves. Anthony Gemma has been astute and unprincipled enough to see that he could profit by buttressing that narrative.

Why is that unprincipled?  Consider the claim that Gemma cares one wit about the nation’s economy, the state’s jobless, Social Security, the air we breathe, the availability and cost of health care (including abortion and contraception), and all the other actual issues in question during this election. Gemma claims to hold views about these issues in direct opposition to the national Republican party, whose well-funded representative the winner of next week’s primary will face.

There’s a balancing test here. On the one hand, Gemma might actually care about the issues before Congress more than he cares about further damaging David Cicilline’s reputation and future. He might think that taking a step towards a more rational and affordable health care system is more important than what appears to be his own irrational hatred of Cicilline. On the other hand, he might not. The evidence of his actions says he cares more about the personal than the policy, and that, it seems to me, is the very definition of unprincipled.

Access to Higher Education


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Almost three months ago, our nation celebrated the 40th anniversary of the establishment of Pell Grants, a program that has opened the doors of higher education to more than 60 million students. Speaking on the Senate floor the day legislation establishing the program was signed by President Richard Nixon, our state’s own Senator Claiborne Pell said “I have worked on this specific legislation for three years. To have it signed into law and know that in the future, higher education will be available to so many more people, is a most gratifying event.”

Senator Pell’s vision and hard work more than four decades ago ensured that generations of Americans could attend college and avoid worrying about being saddled with loans. Today, as the cost of higher education continues to rise, we need to follow Senator Pell’s example to ensure that Rhode Island families can afford to send their children to college.

During my first term in Congress, I have fought to maintain our investments in Pell Grants and higher education. I also worked hard to ensure Congress passed legislation that would prevent the student loan interest rate from doubling. Already this legislation has ensured that more than 7 million students, including more than 43,000 Rhode Islanders, did not incur an additional $6.3 billion in student loan repayment costs this academic year.

Unfortunately, at this critical moment for America’s students, many of my Republican colleagues in the United States Congress have proposed budgets and policies that would further hurt Rhode Island’s young people. For example, the Republican budget proposal introduced by Representative Paul Ryan (R-WI) would have cut approximately $166 billion from student loans and Pell Grants over ten years. The Ryan budget’s insistence on squeezing middle class families and imposing additional financial burdens on students is wrong and it doesn’t reflect our nation’s values and I have been proud to fight against it – as I mentioned during a meeting last April with students at Roger Williams University.

Representative Ryan’s plan would change eligibility requirements for Pell Grants, so that fewer middle class American families would qualify. Shifting money away from Pell Grants would force students who are already under a heavy debt burden to take out additional loans. And yet, after forcing students to take on more loans, Representative Ryan and the Republican leadership repeatedly indicated they were willing to allow subsidized Stafford student loan interest rates to double.

That’s why I spoke out on the House floor last spring to urge consideration of H.R. 3826, a bill that I co-sponsored, in order to prevent student loan interest rates from doubling.  And a few weeks later, I hosted a call to action at Rhode Island College with area students, parents, and business leaders to rally support and awareness about this issue.  I was delighted when Congress finally reached an agreement to extend low-interest student loans for an additional year.

It’s clear that Republicans and Democrats need to continue to work together bring tuition costs under control.  According to the National Center for Education Statistics, in the decade between 2000 and 2010, the price for undergraduate tuition, room, and board at public colleges and universities rose by 37% and at private colleges and universities by 25%.

In real numbers, that has meant an average of $4,000 more money per year for tuition when adjusted for inflation in just the last 10 years. Higher education is quickly becoming unaffordable at just the moment when we need to work even harder to ensure young people have the skills to compete in a rapidly changing 21st century global economy.

As you may know, earlier this year, President Obama proposed tying eligibility for federal aid programs to colleges and universities ability to demonstrate the ways in which they are making tuition more affordable. While we work to protect investments in higher education, I agree that we need to ensure beneficiaries are held accountable and are working hard to cut the cost of tuition for students. Senator Pell advocated for a funding model that was not based purely on enrollment but also on performance, student outcomes and degree completion.

Cutting the costs of tuition for families, however, should not mean a lower quality education for students. The approach should be multifaceted. We should continue to study ways we can use new technology and other innovative delivery models to drive down the cost of education. But we should also make sure students are informed about their options. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau is in the process of completing a project that will mandate side-by-side comparisons of the costs associated with the decision to attend individual colleges so they can make informed choices and spur competition.

There is little doubt that the financial burdens associated with higher education being faced by too many Rhode Island families are real. In memory of the late Senator Pell, we need to roll up our sleeves and work together to lower the cost of higher education so that future generations of Rhode Islanders can acquire the skills they need to succeed.

The Video Barry Hinckley Doesn’t Want You to See


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It must be that Barry Hinckley really doesn’t want Rhode Islanders to see the video we posted of him telling out-of-state donors that although they can’t vote for him, he will vote for them if they help fund in Senate campaign.

It’s a damaging look at his candidacy, especially since he has already been labelled a carpetbagger, so it was no surprise the video was pulled from Youtube shortly after we posted it yesterday morning.

Thankfully for Rhode Islanders who should know that Barry Hinckley has no intention of representing them if elected, RI Future has managed to locate another copy of the video. So in case you missed it yesterday, here it is again today:

Need more proof that this is a central theme for Hinckley’s campaign? Here he is quoted in a press release for a Florida fundraiser saying the same thing:

Hinckley urged attendees to contribute to his campaign because, “Although you can’t vote for me, I can vote for you.”

And just in case you’re still not satisfied, here is another video of Barry Hinckley this time telling a crowd in California that he will vote for these non-Rhode Islanders if they support his campaign financially (at 10:50 mark):

So try as Hinckley might have, here’s all the proof Rhode Island needs to understand that Barry Hinckley doesn’t plan on representing them; his stated intention is to represent those who donate to his campaign regardless of where they live.

Gemma, Doherty Both Caught by WPRI


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WPRI has been particularly tough on Congressman David Cicilline so far this campaign season, but recently the TV station has spread around its journalistic efforts to his opponents as well.

First, there was Anthony Gemma, Cicilline’s opponent in the Democratic Primary. Despite trumpeting the need to create more jobs here, it turns out the businesses rather than ones here in Rhode Island. Someone should tell Gemma that the world’s best jobs plan, let alone his, isn’t going to bolster the economy if we don’t spend our money here.

Then, a Brendan Doherty suppoter got caught – on video, I might add – trying to spy on Cicilline. The young man called and asked for some campaign information. Unfortunately, he called from Doherty headquarters so Cicilline staffers knew to get him on film when he arrived. Here’s the video:

Worst part is that the kid got suspended from the campaign for a few days, as if he went rogue and the campaign didn’t know he was going over there. That’s almost as far fetched as Gemma’s jobs plan.

Doherty Was For Paul Ryan Before He Was Against Him


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Brendan Doherty praising Paul Ryan

After pretty much declaring himself president of the local chapter of the Paul Ryan fan club, conservative congressional candidate Brendan Doherty is now trying to distance himself from Ryan’s plan to slash medical benefits for retirees. Democrats don’t buy it, though.

“Paul Ryan may not be a household name to everyone in Rhode Island, but if you’re a senior citizen who relies on Medicare, you should know who he is and what he stands for, because these are the types of Republicans Brendan will be standing with and voting with, if elected to Congress,” said Bill Fischer, a spokesperson for the state Democratic Party in an email today. “Mr. Doherty’s statements on Monday supporting Medicare are simply not credible after he clearly supported Congressman Ryan at a tea party gathering in May.”

In May, Doherty said told an East Bay Tea Party group the opposite: “I had a great opportunity to meet with Paul Ryan about a month ago and that’s his position and he’s digging his feet in and I applaud him for that and I support him.”

Here’s the video:

Doherty was talking about Ryan’s budget proposal, which would indeed slash Medicare benefits. So which is it Brendan? Do you stand with Rhode Island retirees and the elderly or do you stand with Paul Ryan.

This is how Washington – and politics in general for that matter – works. Whatever Brendan Doherty might say to you while he’s on the stump, you can bet he’ll be voting in lock step with the most conservative Beltway Republicans in the country just as sure as his political mentor is former governor Don Carcieri.

Doherty Disses DISCLOSE Act, Backs Citizens United


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Brendan Doherty

I don’t know what’s worse for Rhode Island: that Republican congressional candidate Brendan Doherty is so conservative that he doesn’t support legislation that would help bring a bit of transparency to political advertisements or that he actually takes money from Citizens United, the namesake of one of the worst Supreme Court decisions ever and the worst thing to ever happen to campaign finance.

Unfortunately for Rhode Islanders, we don’t get a choice as both are true.

“It’s much worse than we thought,” said Bill Fischer, a spokesman for the state Democratic Party, in an email press release. “Standing with Citizens United is disturbing enough, but to also publicly pronounce your opposition to basic campaign finance reform is simply alarming. Brendan Doherty has bought into Citizens United’s mission hook, line and sinker, all for the lowly price of $10,000 and he’s indicated that he is standing with the more extreme flanks of the Republican Party, another sign he is far removed from the political positions of most Rhode Islanders.”

Doherty has been trying to parse himself as a moderate Republican. But his continued opposition to health care reform and his anti-working class and anti-women positions make this harder and harder to believe … now that we know he doesn’t even support the DISCLOSE Act, maybe he doesn’t even support the American people’s right to know who is paying for the propaganda they are watching on TV.

“Doherty’s ‘I’m a moderate’ position is about as thin as an outdoor skating rink in the Mojave Desert,” added Fischer. “The more Mr. Doherty talks frankly about the issues, the more voters of the First Congressional District are going to find out Brendan is a conservative in moderate’s clothing.”

Sheldon Rips Cato Flack Over SuperPAC Spending


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His son may be in trouble with him at home, but in Washington D.C. it’s the corporate lobbyists and apologists who have drawn the ire of Senator Sheldon Whitehouse.

At a congressional hearing on Tuesday called “Restoring Our Democracy” which focused on how to make special interests more accountable in the political process, Whitehouse took Ilya Shapiro of the Cato Institute to the proverbial woodshed when he not-at-all-surprisingly suggested that Sheldon’s DISCLOSE Act put too high a burden on SuperPACs.

Watch the video, courtesy of PCCC:

The highlight is when, in talking about a disabled veteran he met recently, Whitehouse put some perspective on the different type of sacrifices expected of Americans to protect our country’s principles.

“We had asked that you man to go to Afghanistan and we sent him down a road that had an improvised explosive devise under it that blew both his legs off,” said the senator. “If we can ask that young man to do that we can ask the Koch brothers to put up with some impolite blogging.”

Is Barry Hinckley’s Senate Campaign on Life Support?


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Barry Hinckley (Photo by Dave Pepin)

If it’s true that campaign donations determine a candidate’s success then Barry Hinckley might be in some early trouble. The rookie Republican who is challenging progressive Democrat Sheldon Whitehouse for his seat in the Senate seems to be inflating his fundraising prowess a bit.

In a press release earlier this week, Hinckley’s campaign said he “put up another great fundraising quarter” saying he was able to raise “about $275,000.”

Well, not exactly.

Today’s Providence Journal sheds a little additional light on just how much money Hinckley raised. In fact, almost 40 percent of the money he raised this quarter was actually a loan to himself. “Second-quarter campaign-finance reports that show he raised $164,629 and lent his campaign $100,000 during the quarter that ended June 30,” reports Randal Edgar.

He spent more than $155,000 – or, only $9,000 less than he got in actual donations.

By comparison, Hinckley raised $314,000 in the first quarter and didn’t loan himself any money. (Prior to the first quarter, he loaned his campaign $50,000.) That means he took in about half as much in donations this quarter as he did last quarter.

Are even Republican donors abandoning Barry Hinckley? Either way, this isn’t what I’d call a great fundraising quarter.

National and Local Democrats Hit Doherty


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Brendan Doherty

It’s worth checking out the dossier the national Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee put together about Brendan Doherty and his political baggage. Among other things, they say crime went up across the board in Rhode Island while the candidate for CD1 was head of the State Police. It also paints the picture of a far-right Republican who wants to take rights away from women and hurt the working class.

The DCCC file has video of almost all his on-air interviews and appearances, links to all the local news coverage he’s received and a full-on history of his life, including every piece of property and promotion he’s ever received. Did you know he was on the board of directors for Beacon Mutual when the insurance company was mired in a scandal for giving price breaks to choice companies? (Update: Marc Comtois says he remembers Doherty being brought in by his friend Gov. Don Carcieri after the scandal broke)

But the interesting part for me was while national Democrats put together a file on Doherty’s local record, local Dems are hitting him on national issues. In a video released last week, the Rhode Island Democratic Party said Doherty will work hard to repeal health care reform and will generally move in lock step with conservative Republicans like Paul Ryan and John Boehner.

Senate to Vote on Whitehouse’s DISCLOSE Bill Today


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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse at a community supper in East Greenwich.

Today at about 5:30, the U.S. Senate is set to vote on Sheldon Whitehouse’s DISCLOSE bill, which would require SuperPACs and other outside organizations to stand behind the negative ads they sponsor. Whitehouse is expected to speak on the legislation at around midnight.

“We’re doing what we call the midnight vigil,” said Rhode Island’s junior senator, who between this bill and the Buffett Rule bill, has sponsored some of the most high-profile and progressive legislation in the nation during this congressional session. “I’ll be on the floor until about 1 a.m.”

In describing the bill in a conference call on Friday, he said, “This is more than just a battle for clean elections, it’s more than just a battle for an American democracy that we can all be proud of and that can continue to shine its light around the world as an exemplar.”

A pared down version of a 2010 bill, the legislation would require outside political groups to label advertisements in a way that would let the consumer know who is sponsoring the message. In March, before the bill was submitted, Whitehouse described it this way:

“In the same way at the end of my ads I have to say, ‘I’m Sheldon Whitehouse and I approve this message,’ they would have to have an actual disclaimer in the ads that says we’re Exxon Mobile and we approve this message or I’m a billionaire from Macau and I approve this message so that is clear from the actual advertisement itself who the sponsor is.”

Senators are expected to vote along party lines with Democrats supporting the bill and Republicans not. But, in an odd dodge even for Washington D.C., Republicans have taken to inventing reasons not to support it. They say they won’t support it until language is removed that gives exempts labor unions. The only reason Whitehouse said he won’t remove such language, he said, is that it doesn’t exist.

“There is not place in this bill where unions are treted any differently than anyone one else,” Whitehouse said. “If you want to show me a place where I can find it in this bill, where labor unions get special advantage, have at it. Show me some language. You can look at this bill on its face and you can see there is no special treatment for anyone.”

We’ll see tonight if Democrats have any luck convincing Republicans that the language doesn’t exist, or if they come up with new reasons not to support the bill. Proponents of the legislation will be tweeting about it tomorrow, and invite you to join in, using the hashtag: #DiscloseVote.

Anthony Gemma Should Drop Out of CD1 Race


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaThe campaign to represent Rhode Island’s first congressional district in Washington DC will surely be the most interesting and scrutinized local race this year and, so far, there is only one thing that is certain: Anthony Gemma won’t win.

He could, however, potentially damage David Cicilline enough in an ugly primary to leave the incumbent vulnerable to the real challenger, Republican Brendan Doherty. But he won’t win. Not even the primary. No way. Not gonna happen. No chance.

First off, Gemma has absolutely no institutional support, which is crucial in a primary. At Friday’s annual local Democratic Convention, his nomination didn’t even garner a second, reports Will Collette in an excellent piece on the event in Progressive Charlestown. Collette writes:

When it came time for nominations, one delegate, who said she grew up as a friend of Gemma’s back in the day, stood to put his name in nomination. When Party Chair Ed Pachecho asked, not once but three times, if  any delegate would second the nomination, not one delegate among the 200+ would do so.

That leaves me to wonder how Gemma can claim to be the only electable Democrat for the First Congressional District when he can’t organize up a second to his nomination among 200+ Democrats. His supporters yelled out “democracy, democracy” when his nomination failed for lack of a second, but minutes later, they all filed out of the room.

But it’s more than just Gemma’s lack of support that makes him a bad candidate; he’s also just a bad candidate.

Last election, as a rookie, he ran as a pro-business fiscal moderate and this time he is claiming to be more progressive than his very progressive opponent – it paints the picture of a flip-flopper politically and at best an unknown variable on policy given that he’s never held office before, or even shown much interest in the process until a few years ago.

He’s also a pretty poor public speaker, a disaster at dealing with the local press pool and far less than adroit at answering questions on his feet. His latest gaffe was not taking a hardline on Nazi Germany in a recent interview with the RI Progressive Democrats.

Note to all pols: when asked about Hitler or the Nazis, it’s totally okay – if not a necessity of political survival, to throw them under the bus.

For these reasons as well as many others, we implore Anthony Gemma to drop out of the race. He cannot win; he can only do damage to the party he says he supports and, truth be told, he’s kind of embarrassing himself.

Which is too bad, because Gemma is a smart, super hard worker who is genuine and good and who wants to do right by his community. Electoral politics just doesn’t seem to be his bag.

I expect he’ll find more far more success if and when he starts some sort of local liberal think tank or online media venture – either would suit his skill set better than running for office, probably would have a greater impact on Rhode Island and could be done for a fraction of the cost. And, he’d get to be a hero rather than a spoiler.


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