Democrats, Don’t Throw My House Off the Fiscal Cliff

With the election over, across the country progressives are wondering, will the 2nd Obama administration be more progressive than the first? I’m not holding my breath on that one. Of particular concern for me and for you if you’re a home owner, is the potential for a disastrous change in the home mortgage deduction.

We’re the folks on the front-end of our mortgages, who bought at the height of the boom in Providence and elsewhere and who have diligently made our mortgage payments. We’re the ones who decided to ride out the storm and who have the misfortune of not having a loan owned by Fannie or Freddie, with the potential for a below market refi. Our mortgage rates are near double the current rate and the banks have next to no incentive to modify the loan. Hey, we’re the ones who are still paying! Yes, if you’re like me there’s been no bailout for you, and unfortunately the “grand bargain” (Orwellian language if I ever heard it) may put you into foreclosure. Progressives take note.

At issue is the elimination of the so called “tax loophole” of the mortgage deduction. You may not be in this position, but if you’re a homeowner, a second round of foreclosures in the neighborhood is the last thing you need and is a recipe for a double-dip recession if I ever heard one. The question for progressives is, what grand bargain do we strike with the Obama administration? Is our support unconditional? A Romney administration would certainly have been worse, but is a restoration of the Bush tax cuts to the modest levels of a decade ago enough?

Progressives, the time is now to speak up. Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid are all on the table, yet again asking the working class to bailout the bankers. I say a vote for a grand bargain is a vote for a grand betrayal, further sinking the middleclass. Will progressives demand more?

Cicilline Beats Doherty


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While the campaign was heated, the actual election was less so. Congressman David Cicilline easily held onto his seat defeating Brendan Doherty 50% to 42.

Without further adieu, here’s some video of his victory speech:

His fellow Rhode Island progressive Senator Sheldon Whitehouse also won, handily beating Barry Hinckley 64.3 to 35.5%. I’ll have video on that race shortly…

 

Dems Unite Around GOP Smear Campaigns


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Brendan Doherty demonstrating uncommon integrity

I’m glad the Rhode Island Democratic party is finally coming together to renounce the incredibly negative campaigning the Republicans have been resorting to. Let’s hope the media picks up on this story.

In my biased opinion, it’s the biggest meta-narrative of the local campaign this year, but I think it has a lot of merit for my brothers and sisters in the unbiased side of the industry as well.

Today at 1pm at Slater Mill all the Democratic heavyweights in the state – Sheldon, Jack Reed, Cicilline, Elizabeth Roberts, Gina Raimondo, Mayor Taveras and Ed Pacheco, among others (Langevin will be taping the WJAR debate) to call upon their Republican counterparts to stop slinging mud and start talking about issues.

It seems like every day either Brendan Doherty, Barry Hinckley or their operatives release a new dirty and misleading advertisement. Hinckley was just given a Pants on Fire by Politifact today for an untrue ad. Doherty’s ads make a pants on fire rating seem like a gold star though. They have literally been among the most atrocious I’ve ever seen. AP writer Michelle Smith does a nice job of summing up the ad here. She writes:

House Republicans are airing a TV ad in Rhode Island linking freshman Democratic Rep. David Cicilline to a child molester and a murderer he defended when he was a lawyer two decades ago.

A Doherty spokesman told Ian Donnis of RIPR earlier in the week that the campaign decided to go negative because Cicilline did first. Tim White chided Doherty when he offered this same flawed logic during a WPRI debate, saying, “you’re basically saying he started it.”

I think it’s laughable that Brendan Doherty calls himself a man of uncommon integrity and then runs this kind of dirty campaign. There’s no reason unbiased political reporters shouldn’t be calling out a candidate for such an obvious contradiction.

This kind of gutter campaigning isn’t good for anybody and Republicans should be held accountable for resorting to such dirty tactics. But, I suppose if they had a message that would resonate with Rhode Islanders, they’d be ringing that bell instead.

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.”

Convention Reflection: A Rant About Democrats


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Get ready for a rant.  I managed to engage in far less blogging than I’d hoped to over the course of my four days in Charlotte.  Here’s what I was left with:

The convention had its moments, for sure:  What I heard of Elizabeth Warren was very good, certainly by the standards of what you can get away with on national TV.  Her losing to Scott Brown would be a blow as big as Russ Feingold’s loss last cycle.  If genuine, incorruptible, economic populists can’t win in moderate and left-leaning districts then my continued hope for the future of our country seems particularly naive.  Feingold lost to one of the very worst hacks the Tea Party put up last cycle — one who incessantly and successfully framed Feingold as a lock-step party shill, even though he had voted against financial reform from the left (because it didn’t address too-big-to-fail), was the only vote against the Patriot Act, and even cast the sole Democratic vote to try Bill Clinton during the impeachment process in 2000.  (Though voted not to convict him.)

Scott Brown’s only legislative achievement is to have gotten a bill through the Massachusetts General Court outlawing public funding of sex-change operations for prisoners.  FOR REAL.  We shouldn’t be losing to these jokers.

Anyway, Warren is great.  But it was tragic that somebody so knowledgeable about, and dedicated to the cause of, banking reform had to bite her lip and introduce Bill Clinton, whose administration was responsible for much of the deregulation of Wall Street which precipitated the Crash and whose cast of economic “experts” spent eight years twirling though the revolving doors of Manhattan’s tallest towers only to be dredged up by Obama — helping compel him to hedge, again and again, on behalf of high finance.

Clinton’s speech was, of course, gripping and brilliant, but hinged on one’s willingness to suspend disbelief and forgive the corporate shill who brought us financial deregulation, NAFTA, and all that.  (At least he had the sense to veto the Joe Biden-backed bankruptcy reform bill in 2000.  Bush later signed it.)

As mediocre as he’s been, Obama is right to claim superiority to Mitt Romney when it comes to domestic economic policy.  Even if he’s made no move to break up the banks or hold Wall Street accountable for its crimes, Romney would manage to be even worse in these regards.  Obamacare will probably be better than the status quo, even if he could’ve fought harder for a public option.  There’s a real risk that Obama will implement regressive reform of Medicare or Social Security — but Romney would (try to) obliterate them.  It’s good to see Obama take a more aggressive tack against Citizens United (now that he’s realized that he’s going to lose the mad dash for dollars that it’s precipitated).

In the civil liberties realm in which I now work, it’s actually difficult to imagine that Romney could be far worse than Obama:  This brilliant video by Gawker was recently circulated — it has the videographer asking prominent Dems if they think that Romney’s ready to be put in charge the kill list Obama instituted.  He supports the Patriot Act.  He supports warrantless wiretapping.  And I’m flabbergasted by his crack-down on medical marijuana — that cause is just so popular with Americans that I can’t even conceive of a cynical political calculus that could’ve driven him to take such a heavy-handed stand against it.

He’s kept us in Afghanistan, took us to war in Libya without approval from Congress, and as the Onion headline asked, could the use of flying death robots be hurting America’s reputation worldwide?

Obama’s made two recent attempts to jazz up the progressive base he once called his own: announcing his support for gay marriage and pushing through a modified version of the Dream Act.  Both are genuinely wonderful developments, but we should note that neither runs contrary to the interests of finance:  The Chamber of Commerce has consistently supported immigration reform — and fewer people will be helped by the Dream Act than have already been deported by Obama — who has deported immigrants at a rate about 50% faster than George W Bush.

But the most defensible reason to support Obama (at least in the swing states) is the chance that he’ll get to appoint another Sotomayor (and not a Kagan) to the Court during his continued tenure in office.  Those appointees who’ve made it past an intransigent Republican Senate caucus have actually been pretty good — some of his appointees have even been willing to buck the administration when it’s the right thing to do: Katherine Forrest, whom Obama appointed just last year, has so far defied his DOJ’s attempts to defend the indefinite detention law that he signed this past New Year’s.  (Demand Progress, the org I run, is helping fund the lawsuit against indefinite detention.)

This is all to say that while there are reasons to support Obama and hope that he beats Romney, it’s also imperative to remember that the national Democratic establishment leaves much to be desired.  Activists must remain in constant vigilance, and push back hard against party insiders who, in large part, came to power because of their allegiance to moneyed interests.  And the lack of such a nuanced understanding of the attributes and failings of our party was stark in Charlotte.  I participated in a wonderful event put on by Progressive Democrats of America, which attracted several hundred attendees over the course of the first day of the convention, but that was just about it.

Absent was any broader sense of the need to — let alone a strategy by which to — push back against a Democratic establishment whose inertia has it shifting ever-further to the right (with rare exceptions like gay marriage) — a phenomenon which serves neither the interests of the party nor those of our country.  (And just makes me so darned sad.)

Full Text of Gov. Linc Chafee’s DNC Speech


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Gov. Linc Chafee as seen from the press box at the DNC (Photo by John McDaid)

“Good evening, and thank you for having me here to celebrate with all of you. As the nation’s only independent Governor, I am here tonight to join with my Democratic friends, on the eve of an election critical to the future of our children and their country.

As a former Republican, I represent a group of Americans who all too often have no one to speak for them. This group doesn’t necessarily have a name.

We’ve been called “moderates,” but that term can be misleading. There is nothing moderate about our love of country or our passion for America’s future. There is nothing moderate about our desire to work together within the broad political center in which most Americans live.

No matter what you call us though, this is certain: there are a lot of us all over the country, and in November we will once again help elect Barack Obama President of the United States.

We are, at our core, conservatives, in the best sense of the word. Thoughtful, responsible with public resources, and respectful of personal freedom. And we are liberal, in the best sense of the word.

We believe that government can and should be an instrument for the greater good. And although my former party has hijacked the term, there is really nothing conservative about today’s Republican Party. In fact, there is no room there for traditional conservatives like us. But I am proud to say that in my friend President Barack Obama we have found a champion for the principles we hold dear.

First, we love this land — literally. We believe in environmental stewardship… protecting our air and our water. Because despite what big business and this Republican Party would have you believe, destroying these precious resources will cost us far more in the future than preserving them now.

Second, we believe in personal freedom. We do not want the government controlling our personal lives, or our most personal decisions. Believing in freedom, as we do, we don’t think it’s the role of government to pass judgment on a relationship between two consenting adults, regardless of their orientation. Believing in freedom, we believe a woman should make her own reproductive decisions.

Third, we take seriously the decision to enter into foreign entanglements.

During the last Administration, then-Senator Obama and I served together on the Foreign Relations Committee.

There, we shared a mutual desire to end the prevailing attitude of arrogance and recklessness on matters of war and peace that characterized those years.

President Obama knows that wars are not to be entered into lightly; he knows that overseas conflicts don’t only do damage in the land in which they are fought, but in the land of those who  fight them, as well.

Fourth, we believe in using the tools of government to help Americans help themselves. For instance, programs such as Head Start and the Pell Grants have brightened the futures of countless American young people and given them a hand up into the middle class. Now, Mitt Romney and the Republicans are proposing a budget that would squeeze the life out of Head Start and Pell grants.

Let me ask you: Should only children of the wealthy have access to quality early education? Should only children of the wealthy have access to a college degree? The answer — the only answer – is:  No. American education is still the wonder of the world, and we must open the schoolhouse doors, not close them. A strong, educated middle class is what made America the greatest country in the world. Students of America, working families of America: President Obama will not turn his back on you.

Finally, we believe in fiscal responsibility. We think it’s reasonable to pay for a valuable service that the people want by asking everyone to do their part. The lack of fiscal responsibility is one of the main reasons I finally left my old Party.

In 2001 President Bill Clinton handed the Republicans a surplus. They went on to squander this surplus by launching two wars, expanding the cost of Medicare, and giving tax cuts to the wealthiest Americans – and failing to pay for any of these.

Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan want to return us to the fantasy land of never having to pay for the things we buy, such as education, medical research, good roads, and clean energy.

That’s not conservative. That’s not responsible. And it’s not what this country needs.

The values I have spoken of tonight aren’t Republican or Democratic values – they’re American values.

They are the values of Abraham Lincoln, who affirmed the fundamental dignity of all Americans – regardless of the color of their skin.

They are the values of Theodore Roosevelt, who protected millions of acres from development and exploitation, so that future Americans – today’s Americans – could enjoy them as fully as he did.

They are the values of Dwight Eisenhower, who presided over an era of peace and prosperity – because he knew that those two conditions go together.

These are American values.

But because they have no place in today’s Republican Party, neither do I – and neither do millions like me.

But, my fellow traditional conservatives… my fellow moderates… my fellow independents… there is a candidate who shares our values.

A candidate who shares our belief in: Environmental protection. Personal liberties. Smart and responsible American leadership. Growing the middle class. and fiscal discipline.

That candidate is our President, Barack Obama.

Thank you.”

Recovery Caucus Pushes for Mental Health Parity


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From left: Carol Dhue, David Wellstone and Patrick Kennedy. (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC — Former RI Representative Patrick Kennedy was a guest speaker at this afternoon’s Recovery Caucus meeting at the Democratic National Convention and he brought his message of full mental health parity to a standing-room-only session.

The panel was chaired by RI delegate Tom Coderre, who works for Senate President Teresa Paiva Weed. It also featured David Wellstone, son of the late Senator, and former cable network anchor Carol Dhue.

Coderre recognized the work of Kennedy in backing the Recovery Caucus, which is sponsoring recovery rooms every day in all of the DNC’s venues. “This is the most recovery-friendly convention ever,” he said, and praised the 2012 Democratic platform which “recognizes recovery as the public-health crisis that it is.”

But Coderre and the other speakers also stressed how much work remains to be done.

Although legislation ensuring parity in mental health coverage was signed into law, Kennedy argued that it was time for the department of Health and Human Services (HHS) to issue the final rules that would enable enforcement.

“We expect implementation that will not have any loopholes,” he said. “Right now, these issues affect a new population: veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan.” Kennedy expressed outrage that more veterans are now dying  by suicide than enemy action.   “Our vets are being caught behind the enemy lines of addiction and depression,” he said.

Closing potential loopholes is especially critical, Kennedy said,  for those members of the National Guard and Reserve returning to their jobs after deployment.

And veterans are only part of the “besieged minority” affected by these diseases, said Wellstone, quoting his his father, who was an early advocate. “It is not just the right thing to do, it’s the fiscally responsible thing to do,” Wellstone said, given the estimated $400B yearly cost of untreated addiction and mental health issues. Without the final HHS rule, said Wellstone, “we don’t have the teeth.”

“If your father was here,” Dhue told Wellstone, “we’d already have teeth in the bill.”

She lamented the fact that unlike other diseases, addiction and mental health are improperly overlaid with moral attributes.

“It comes down to science,” she said. “I was wired to be an addict.”

Carol McDaid, a DC-based advocate, asked caucus-goers for their support in launching a petition to fight for the final regulations, and announced a web site for the effort, parityispersonal.org.

Demanding Progress in Charlotte at DNC


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I’m en route to the Democratic Convention in Charlotte, where I’ll be doing a combination of work for Demand Progress, taking part in assorted progressive rabble-rousing, and hopefully blogging for RIFuture and the Daily Dose.

Demand Progress’s efforts to secure Internet freedom language in the Republican platform were successful: Anybody abiding by the new platform would’ve opposed SOPA and CISPA — the privacy obliterating cyber-security bill that passed the House a few months ago, but is dead (at least for now) in the Senate.  Now it’s the Democrats’ turn.  You can read more about our work on this front over here.  (Yep, that’s a link to Fox News.)

I’ll be spending a lot of time at the Progressive Central hub, sponsored by Progressive Democrats of American, The Nation, and others.  There’s an impressive series of speakers and panels which you can watch live here.

The line-up includes the likes of Rev. Jesse Jackson, Michael Dukakis, and several of our progressive champions in Congress, like John Conyers and Raul Grijalva, who’ll be speaking to critical issues that aren’t likely to get much play on the main stage: Wall Street run amok, the narrow concentration of wealth in America, corporate control of government, and more.

I’m speaking on this panel tomorrow morning:

10:15 to 11:10 Guided Discussion: We the People, Not We the Corporations—Ending Corporate Rule.

John Nichols—Moderator

Steve Cobble—Progressive Democrats of America (PDA)

David Cobb—Move to Amend

David Segal—Demand Progress

DNCC Lays Out Convention Themes in Opening Presser


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Left-right, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, DNCC Secretary Alice Germond, Obama for America press secretary Ben LaBolt, Conventn Chair LA Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, and DNCC CEO Steve Kerrigan (Photo by John McDaid)

CHARLOTTE, NC — The Democratic National Convention kicked off this morning with a press conference previewing the week and repeatedly stressing two key messages: that the convention is the most open and accessible in history, and that a key Obama campaign theme  will be “rebuilding America from the middle class out.”

The 50-minute presser featured DNCC Chair Steve Kerrigan, Charlotte Mayor Anthony Foxx, Convention Chair Los Angeles Mayor Antionio Villaraigosa, DNC Secretary Alice Germond, and Obama for America Press Secretary Ben LaBolt.

The main news from the session was that the draft platform will be distributed to all delegates when they arrive in the hall tomorrow, and that Georgia Rep. John Lewis has been selected as Sergeant-at-arms for the proceedings.

“It’s been incredible to see the ground energy for this convention and this President,” said Foxx, who expressed pride that Charlotte was hosting its  first major political convention in 150 years, and while he predicted a close race, he expressed optimism about Obama carrying the state again in 2012.  “The people of North Carolina understand that this President has had their back.”

Just as the convention four years ago in Denver helped the campaign focus the energy of its 25,000 local volunteers, Villaraigosa said that Charlotte would do the same for North Carolina.  “This is the start of a new way to engage in the political process,” he said, promising a “working convention,” that would engage and energize volunteers and participants as well as laying out a vision and articulating a path forward.

And the people doing that work on the  delegate side represent a true cross-section of America, said Germond, noting that among the 5,556 delegates and 407 alternates — 50% of them women– there were increases in African-American, Latino, and youth representation, with a record 644 young delegates, including 285 students. “In many cases, this is their very first convention,” she said. “We will learn from them.”

In the Q&A, LaBolt responded to a question about the significance of today’s Gallup results which found Romney’s convention speech last week produced only a marginal bump.  “Most Americans who tuned in were looking for answers,” he said, “but the Romney convention speech didn’t address their questions.” He promised that President Obama’s speech — which he said is still being fine-tuned — would “lay out the pillars for rebuilding the economy from the middle class out.”

Why America Is Screwed, but How RI Can Help


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Illustration by Jay Vollmar, courtesy of Denver Westword.

I’m in a particularly foul mood this evening, so I thought I’d share. And I’ll get right to the point:

America, you’re screwed.

With growing frequency, I’ve heard or read conversations between people of opposite political philosophies that go something like this:

Sap #1: X is bad and ruining the country.

Sap #2: Yeah, well both political parties are equally responsible.

[Some amount of discussion about which party is more responsible, ending with agreement that corporate power and its influence on government are at the heart of the problem.]

Sap #1: Yeah, that’s why I’m voting for [Jill Stein, Gary Johnson or other 3rd-party wastes of time] for President.

Sap #2: Yeah.

To me, this is equivalent to determining that your roof leaks and that a storm is on the way. And then deciding the best course of action is to draw a nice bath.

If I were an oligarch and read that silliness on the Facebook, I’d clip the end off a Cuban and light it with a one hundred dollar bill.

“Nothing to worry about here.”

The Ugly Analysis

What’s most depressing about this line of reasoning is that it gets so perilously close to actual sanity before plunging itself into madness. Let’s take it bit by bit to see why.

“X is bad and its ruining the country.” 

“X” here could be pretty much anything, and I won’t argue about whether or not X is ruining the country. The US electorate seems hell-bent on ruining the country, so it’s a virtually endless list of items we could drop in here. If you think it’s ruining the country, I’m inclined to agree.

“Yeah, well both political parties are equally responsible.”

Here, we could quibble around the edges about which political party is more responsible for what, but in the aggregate, both political parties are equally culpable for the grand cluster-up that is USA 2012. From the police state at home to the military actions abroad both overt and covert, from elementary schools built on toxic waste dumps to the outrageous national debt and ALWAYS AND ESPECIALLY the ever-present, unimpeachable, saint-like presence of “The Market” as the ultimate arbiter of both value and values, the situation this nation faces would not have been possible but for the cooperation of both major political parties. Controversy here = 0.

[Discussion ending with awareness that corporate power and its influence on government are really and truly the problem.]

Wait, really? I should look into this concept. /sarcasm

Intermission Report: The Analysis Thus Far

There is no doubt that whatever is ruining this country stems from the fact that corporations are people with the same rights as you and me, but none of the responsibilities. Their money is speech, so they can “speak” in the political realm as much as they please. In fact, they can speak so much and so loudly that they can effectively write the laws that govern us all. Only they make sure the laws are such that if they get in trouble, instead of going to jail they get a giant check from The Taxpayers. Taxpayers are just like Corporate People, only we have to pay taxes.

Thus our hypothetical conversation has arrived at a potentially revolutionary moment. Both participants have realized that they are humans getting screwed by a governmental structure designed to support non-humans (corporations).

And then, it all goes so horribly wrong…

Why You’re Screwed, America

“That’s why I’m voting for a third-party/independent party candidate for President.”

Whoever says something along these lines needs to take a moment and reflect on whether or not they really ought to vote. I mean, if you’re foolish enough to do something like this with your vote for President, who know what kind of jackassery will influence your vote for an office that could actually DO SOMETHING about the situation.

To be sure, the idea of a third party is a fine one. This nation should have third, fourth and fifth parties. Hell, we’re big enough to have dozens of parties that win offices of various sorts. The third party portion is not what’s at issue here.

It’s the foolish, corporately-supported, bipartisan charade that the president can actually do something. In these pages, I’ve called the Presidency a McGuffin. It’s the Lady Gaga of politics. (And, per the late Gore Vidal, politics is the entertainment division of the military/industrial complex!) Nothing could be more meaningless to real change.

Yet you believe the President to be THE MOST important elected position, America. And that is why you’re screwed.

Hell, the third parties themselves are so brainwashed that they run a Jill Stein or a Gary Johnson for President, and do so with a straight face. I sometime wonder if the Koch Bros aren’t funding these effort surreptitiously. Gary Johnson makes Don Quixote look like Harry Truman!

And Now, For Something Completely Different

Those who know me know I’m loathe but morally required to say that if any political force in the US were serious about changing the dialog in this nation, they would study relentlessly and without judgement the efforts of the Republican Party of Texas from roughly 1985 to the present. These TX GOPers are an exercise in democratic revolution. They have (mostly) legally changed the conversation in hundreds of horrible ways. But they have changed the conversation.

And they didn’t do it by electing a President. In fact, that George W. Bush – an aligned, conservative Texan – was elected President was at best a side benefit. In all likelihood it was just happenstance.

These hardcore religious fanatics did it the old fashioned way: they ran for office. Any office. Every office. Zoning Board, Zoning Board of Appeals, School Committee, Dog Catcher. Not just any, but ALL of the local and state offices. And they won.

In so doing, they built a base through which they affected change such as they wanted to the point that national textbook publishers must now consider their wishes when creating schoolbooks.  Look deeply into the abyss, Lefty, and behold your desires!

So successful were these grassroots GOPers that they recently got their just desserts at the 2012 Republican National Convention: party bosses (read, wealthy donors) changed the rules to severely limit their ability to influence their party. And Ron Paul and the force that he legitimately mustered…well, any fair-minded person recognizes a straight-up freeze-out when he or she sees it.

Little Rhody, the Progressive Example?

It’s entirely possible the we here in Rhode Island could be the example for left-leaning efforts across the country. We’re not big enough to influence textbook publishers the way Texas (or California) can. But we can set out a template that others can look to build from. In 2012, it seems that we have an unprecedented number of first-time, left-leaning people-of-the-people running for state and local office.

Just off the top of my head we have Libby Kimzey, Abel Collins and Mark Binder running for state and federal offices. Two first-time women are running in the Democratic primary to replace retiring state senator Rhoda Perry. I know there are many, many more independents and/or first-timers that I can’t call to mind. But we got ’em.

This is how you build a base – from the bottom up.

If only a portion of these new-to-politics candidates win, it means that more will follow based on their success as they were emboldened by the success of the Teresa Tanzi’s and Sabina Matos’s of our local scene.

In Conclusion

America, you’re screwed if you focus on the President as the elected office in which you place your revolutionary aims. But, Little Rhody, you just keep electing these outsiders, and who knows? You just might push this country in a positive direction.

Wait, what happened? Wasn’t I in a foul mood?

Progress Report: RI Is Most Democratic But Not So Liberal; RISC Dumps Don Carcieri; Gamblers Need New Casino


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We may be the most bluest state, according to a new study done by Gallup, but keep in mind that distinction doesn’t mean any more than the D after Jon Brien or Doc Corvese’s name on the ballot.

Especially in the northern parts of the state, Rhode Islanders will instinctively vote for Democrats, even if like Brien and Corvese, their politics are more-closely aligned with the GOP. That’s why we call it the Democrats in Name Only.

Speaking of not staying true … it seems that things have gotten so bad for former Gov. Don Carcieri that not even the conservative-leaning Rhode Island Statewide Coalition, which held its annual summer meeting this weekend, is willing to stand behind their former champion anymore.  For the past several years, it gave out an award called the Donald L. Carcieri Award for Good Government. Not this year, though. Wonder what happened?

On Friday I wondered aloud if anyone would be willing to stick up for gay-bashing congressman Allen West who was in town this weekend to raise money for local Republicans. It turns out Michael Riley, running against Jim Langevin, not only supports him but thinks he should run for president. Here’s what West once said about progressives: “I believe there’s about 78 to 81 members of the Democrat Party who are members of the Communist Party. It’s called the Congressional Progressive Caucus.”

Compulsive gamblers better hope Rhode Islanders pass a casino referendum this November … if we don’t, public money for their addictive habit will dry up. So, in other words, the state is only interested in funding gambling cessation programs if we can also make it much easier to gamble…

For the first time Narragansett Beer will be available outside of the East Coast as the 130-year-old lager will now be brewed in Wisconsin as well as the East Coast. Hi, neighbor indeed.

Anyone who cares about Narragansett Bay or the culture of quahogging in the Ocean State should read my friend Ray Huling’s book, which EG Patch did a great feature on. It’s a great read about how we allowed one of the state’s best resources to nearly fall off the map up until they get fried and sold out of a clam shack.

The produce grown at the Charlestown Community Garden goes to help feed the less fortunate in South County.

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.

It’s a Showdown in CD1


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(via Wikipedia)

Elections didn’t used to be this way in Rhode Island. If you ran for federal office and won, you were pretty much guaranteed an unassailable position from which to plot your next step in life; be that a higher federal office, a cabinet position, retirement, or death. In fact, for roughly three out of four of our federal officers, that’s still pretty much the case. But our newest addition to our federal delegation isn’t finding it so easy.

Yes, the latest news out of WPRI’s pollster Fleming & Associates is that incumbent U.S. Representative David Cicilline has a 4.3% lead among likely primary voters over challenger Anthony Gemma, with 19.9% of voters undecided. Rep. Cicilline triumphed with a 14.1% lead over Mr. Gemma and slightly larger leads over David Segal and Bill Lynch in 2010; a year that had older voters motivated in a right-wing backlash against Barack Obama and the Democratic Party.

The poll ultimately shows that Rep. Cicilline draws strong support from 18-39 year-olds, and has an advantage among female voters. It also shows that according to voters, his apology hasn’t had much impact or made them less likely to vote for him. However, the key issue that 45.7% of voters cared about was “Economy/Jobs”. “Providence Finances” came in fifth at 7.3%, behind “Best Chance to Win in November” (7.9%), “Experience” (11.3%) and “Character” (23.8%).

The good news for Rep. Cicilline is that his job approval ratings are higher among primary voters than the general electorate; in February, just 19.6% of registered voters said that Rep. Cicilline’s job performance was “Excellent” or “Good”. Among likely primary voters, that number is 32.1%. Not stunning, but not terrible either. And since 33.8% of voters rank his performance as “Fair” (whatever that means), there’s a cushion there.

The other good news, one that cuts both ways, is that Anthony Gemma remains an unknown quantity to most primary voters, 45.4% said they didn’t know enough to give him a favorability rating. Among those who did, 37.7% ranked him as “Very” or “Somewhat Favorable”. WPRI’s Joe Fleming points out that this allows Mr. Gemma to build himself up, or alternatively, allows Rep. Cicilline to tear him down.

Anthony GemmaMr. Gemma Trying To Ride Two Horses At Once

Mr. Gemma has had some serious issues already. Beyond the initial SNAFU when his announcement devolved into him abandoning it in an attempt to avoid the press, Mr. Gemma has been embroiled in trouble over whether he’d be a sore loser if he fails to triumph in the primary in September; and lingering questions of just how committed he is to the Democratic Party. After a meeting with the Democratic City and Town Committee Chairs Association, Mr. Gemma was blasted by Tiverton Democratic Town Committee chair Mike Burk, who claimed that Mr. Gemma would mount an independent campaign if he lost. Portsmouth Democratic Town Committee chair says that Mr. Gemma said he’d merely write his own name in.

But beyond the he-said, he-said of that particular exchange, Mr. Burk also claimed that Mr. Gemma’s 2012 campaign was reminiscent of his 2010 campaign, which sounded more like he was running for governor than for U.S. representative. Indeed, he’s promised 10,000 jobs to Rhode Island, a claim which sounds far-fetched even if he was running for governor, much less a junior representative in a party likely to be in the minority in the 113th Congress.

Also undercutting him is a problem of insincerity. Having claimed to be the progressive in the race, Mr. Gemma comes from a strong business background, one that was cited for 32 labor violations. He did not vote in the 2008 Democratic presidential primary (one of the closest presidential primary races in recent history), and only affiliated as a Democrat prior to his first run in 2010. He also has said that he is anti-abortion, but would not vote against a woman’s right to choose. Which doesn’t signal strong convictions more than it signals a willingness to do what’s necessary to get elected; a criticism Mr. Gemma has lobbed against Rep. Cicilline on more than one occasion.

Brendan Doherty Lies Waiting in the General

Regardless of which Democrat wins, they’ll run up against Republican Brendan Doherty. Between a WPRI Newsmakers interview where he came out in favor of letting all of the Bush tax cuts expire and a recent statement that he favored the reinstatement of Glass-Steagall to separate commercial and investment banks, Mr. Doherty now has an economic policy far to the left of many Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives. It should be noted he also has said he favors “right to work” legislation and that Rep. Cicilline has signed onto a bill to reinstate Glass-Steagall and supports ending the Bush tax cuts for those earning more thant $250,000 a year.

But Mr. Doherty’s statement on Glass-Steagall (repealed in the early 1990s under the neoliberal bonanza of the Clinton presidency) raises the specter of accusations during his primary campaign that he was merely a Republican-in-name-only, something which is not helped by Mr. Doherty also having a lead among unionized workers versus Rep. Cicilline in the last poll in which they were matched.

If the economy remains the number one issue for voters, Rhode Island’s Congressional District 1 may have a thunderous battle over economic policies that tilt towards the left if Mr. Cicilline makes it through. On the other hand, Democratic primary voters may face a more traditional interventionist vs. laissez-faire economic debate.

It used to be that federal office in Rhode Island was a secure perch. But even if Mr. Cicilline fails to survive this, his successor, imperfect as the leading two candidates for it are, may face a similar struggle in 2014.

Gemma Said He Wouldn’t Vote For Cicilline


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaAnthony Gemma says he running against Congressman David Cicilline to help keep the CD1 seat in the hands of the Democrats. But he also said that he wouldn’t vote for Cicilline in the general election if the incumbent beats him in the primary.

“I said in good consciousness I cannot support David Cicilline,” Gemma told me, recounting what he said Monday night at the endorsement meeting for the Rhode Island Association of Democratic City and Town Chairpersons.

After talking about it with me, Gemma softened his position, saying, “We’re in a political fight right now. On September 12, I will reassess my position.”

He added, My number one objective is to keep the seat Democratic. I will rally behind the Democratic party.”

But some at the Monday night meeting doubt that is really Gemma’s objective.

Leonard Katzman, the chairman of the Portsmouth Democratic Town Committee said Gemma told the group he would write in his own name rather than vote for Cicilline, a statement that made him question Gemma’s motives.
“His entire pitch is that he wants to ensure that the seat remains with the Democratic party,” Katzman said. “If he’s not willing to support the eventual nominee, that tells me he’s really not interested in keeping it with the Democrats.”
In an email sent out after the meeting, Mike Burk, chair of the Tiverton Democratic Town Committee, wrote that Gemma said he would run as an independent if he doesn’t win the primary, even if that helps the GOP retain control of the House of Representatives. Gemma refutes this allegation and says he has an audio recording of the meeting to prove it.

Governor Chafee On RI: ‘We’ve Hit Rock Bottom’


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Mayor Grebien Gov Chafee
Mayor Grebien Gov Chafee
Pawtucket Mayor Don Grebien pleads for the municipal aid package as Gov. Chafee listens.

In an Economist article entitled “Bankruptcy in Rhode Island“, Governor Lincoln Chafee is quoted as saying “We’ve hit rock bottom in this state”. And, frankly, I don’t know how to take it.

The article is about the municipal budget problems that are cropping up across the Rhode Island. Essentially, as we well know, Rhode Island is undergoing austerity, and in ways that of course fall mostly on those that can least afford it (as Rolling Stone‘s Matt Taibbi has pointed out, austerity only applies to regular people). The recent showings in Greece and France, where anti-austerity forces triumphed and expanded (turning Europe back towards fascism and communism as it did in the post-WW1 era), provide continued support to my thesis that austerity overthrows its own enactors. And that’s to say nothing of Italy, where in local provincial elections, an anti-austerity political party set up by a comedian thrashed the parties in government.

The problem for Gov. Chafee is that he and the General Assembly are largely responsible for Rhode Island’s austerity crisis (indeed, the General Assembly can only blame themselves). But for the small caucus of progressives in both the House and Senate, even most Democratic legislators are pro-austerity.

Rhode Island is not even blessed with an anti-austerity third party (the Moderates are pro-austerity). Certainly, that party would be hamstrung by its lack of association with a viable national political party. Since anything coming out of the right would be DOA, any such party would have to partly modeled on the Vermont Progressive Party. And let’s face it, large swathes of political players in Rhode Island are completely tied to the current model of politics as it is now; changing that threatens much of the work that’s done to understand and operate in the system that many, many organizations have built up. The work towards change is largely focused on working within the Democratic dynamic, which leaves progressives particularly open to co-optation by the demands of various party factions when they come to power.

But even that sort of wishful thinking ignores what Gov. Chafee said. Rhode Island is at rock bottom, and if the Governor is wrong, it’s only because we have further to fall. We’re completely shot through, economically, we’re devastated. And yet, the policy makers, like a man stuck at the bottom of a very deep hole, can only find ways to chew off their own hands rather then reach for ways out. If you’re not convinced, read URI economics professor Len Ladardo’s blog, which has been positing that Rhode Island is struggling to prevent a double dip recession for a while now (Mr. Ladardo is now telling RIPR’s Ian Donnis that Rhode Island needs deep structural changes). Or you could read GoLocalProv’s recent no-duh inflammatory headline. Yet the reality is that no matter whether you’re a conservative or liberal, objectivist or socialist, no one has a clear way forward out of our economic disaster. I particularly find “let the free market sort this out” arguments entirely unconvincing, because the free market got us into this mess.

What is striking to me, and maybe this is due to editing on the Economist’s part, is that there’s no sugar-coating on the Governor’s words. There isn’t even a “but Rhode Islanders have the strength to pull through.” It’s a grim statement, because the reality is very, very grim. Luckily we have Hope in this state. And we’re going to need it.

Americans Care for Political Parties More than Policies


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Imagine turning on your car radio and hearing of the baseball trade of the century. The New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox had just traded their entire rosters to each other. That’s right, Jeter and Rivera are now Red Sox and Pedroia and Lester will suit-up for the Bronx Bombers. How do you feel most fans would react? Do you think most loyal Sox rooters would switch over to the Yankees? Do you think most Yankee fans would now adopt Jacoby Ellsbury as their own?

It’s my belief that once all is said and done a significant number of fans cheer for laundry. Very few players come from the places they play for. In fact, in baseball, basketball and hockey many don’t come from the United States. Fans root for players despite steroid scandals (Barry Bonds) episodes of cheating (Bill Belichick, Paul Hornung) and drug use (Lawrence Taylor). In some cases fans will even ignore major legal woes (L.T. again, Ben Roethlisberger, etc.). The only time fans will turn against athletes is if they jump teams (LeBron James), verbally insult the town, or stop trying (quit on the team). Other than that – fans live vicariously through players for reasons that defy logic.

In many ways party politics is much the same as sports when it comes to who to support and vote for. Sure, many folks will vote for the best individual or the best political position/solution just as a number of fans enjoy the game and root for individual players or a certain team’s approach towards competing. However, a significant portion of fans choose the local team to cheer for due to zip code and again, laundry. Voters are often the same. We all know people who claim to be either Republicans or Democrats. We all know people who say the Republicans are all this and the Democrats all that. Along with this train of thought comes one party is the good one while the other is responsible for all the ills of the world.

Stereotypically, Democrats are presently seen as the party of big government, entitlement and passivity. They are also the party of choice for overwhelming numbers of Black and Hispanic voters. All of this hasn’t always been so. In fact, history tells us that Democrats were often the ones who fought against many of the measures designed to support minorities. Folks like George Wallace (Alabama) and Lester Maddox (Georgia) battled hard to maintain much of the segregation of the Deep South. Amazingly, it was Lyndon Johnson ( a Texas Democrat) who broke ranks in 1964 by signing the Civil Rights Bill. A total of 18 Southern Democrats attempted filibustering the bill–eventually to no avail.

Going way back, Democrats in the 1880’s took a strong stance against the labor movement. Doesn’t sound like today’s Democratic Party does it?  On top of all of this it’s amusing to hear how Democrats are viewed as passive when Harry S. Truman OK’d the dropping of two nuclear bombs and his predecessor Franklin Roosevelt was heavily involved with most decisions involving World War II. Oh yeah–don’t forget JFK’s involvement with the Bay of Pigs and the Cuban Missile Crisis. Sometimes it’s just easier to go with the stereotypes I guess.

As for the Republicans, they are often viewed as being for big business, a large and active military, opposed to social programs and heavy on the caucasian side. Again, history often depicts a different picture. Lincoln worked to abolish slavery and all that ensued.

Teddy Roosevelt (interestingly) won the Nobel Peace Prize for his involvement bringing the Russo-Japanese war to an end and also was famous for being a ‘trust-buster’ seeking to curb the power of large corporations. Fascinating, considering this came from a guy who once said “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” Who would have thought he’d use that stick against rich folk on occasion? It should also be noted that Teddy was a big advocate for the environment. Imagine ‘Mr. Bully Pulpit’ being a ‘Tree Hugger’. Finally, let’s not forget, while Clinton pointed to the military industrial complex it was actually Dwight Eisenhower who coined the phrase. We should also keep in mind that Truman nearly begged Eisenhower to run as a Democrat in the 1952 election.

Democrats acting like Republicans–Republicans acting like Democrats–sounds as though the Yankees and the Red Sox just made that big trade I offered in the first paragraph. Still, folks cheer for their home team. Still, loyal Republicans and Democrats root for Elephants and Donkeys despite what history reports.

Why people vote the way they do is probably a lot like why sports fans cheer for who they do. As I stated previously, certainly some who follow athletics dig deeply into history and develop an understanding, a sense of which player is effective and to some extent how and why. The same can be said for many voters–there are those who understand trends, values and the major issues. In spite of this there are individuals who simply vote and cheer by emotion, perpetual motion or a small knowledge base. Sometimes we confuse this for loyalty.

For certain, loyalty can be a good quality in most instances. However, blind loyalty often leads to jingoism, fanaticism and other such stuff. We’ve seen Chicago Cubs fans castigate Steve Bartman for his interfering with a foul ball which many feel led to another demise by the Cubs. We’ve seen Boston fans scream and shout at Bill Buckner for letting Mookie Wilson’s slow roller go through his legs. In basketball, Wilt Chamberlain was often called a choker by fans and on the gridiron, quarterbacks on winning teams, especially Super Bowl winners, are seen as better than those who lose (despite circumstances). Stuff like this doesn’t always make sense–but neither does taking off your shirt, painting yourself a certain color and then sitting around watching a game in below freezing weather.

Politics brings out some of the same behavior we see in sports. Have you ever seen a political rally or convention? Oh those hats! Oh those buttons and placards! OH that B.S. It’s really not all that much different from a sporting event. Some people buy this stuff. Why? Perhaps they feel a sense of belonging. Perhaps they also feel a sense of power. My party winning the presidency is a lot like your team winning the Super Bowl. Obviously, the political ramifications influence things like foreign policy, the pocketbook, rights and privileges, etc.– but the process of who we root for is close to the same.

Politics and sports both have their rivalries and deep sense of loyalty. When Babe Ruth was traded to the Yankees from Boston it sparked an intense and bitter war, which for the Bostonians didn’t play out well. The Curse of the Bambino resulted in the Sox not winning a title for 86 years. The Ruth trade initiated one of sports greatest rivalries which is as intense today as ever. The ‘Babe’ became a NY idol and a Boston object of scorn. Politics too has its rivalries. Jefferson vs. Adams, Lincoln vs. Douglas and Nixon vs. Kennedy are but a few of the most famous. While Ruth went to NY via a trade, no sin in politics is worse than being labeled a flip-flopper. Never mind additional information. Forget seeing an issue in a different light. If you get labeled a flip-flopper you are in trouble (especially if you flip on your own party). Kind of goes back to that rooting for laundry thing or ‘Don’t baffle me with facts, my mind is already made up’. Sports stars changing teams is one thing, but politicians make really important decisions. Being loyal is seen as more important than doing the right thing.

It should be noted that Strom Thurmond once did the big switcheroo from Democrat to Republican over civil rights and segregation issues. In fact, a number of Democrats jumped ship after Lyndon Johnson pushed his civil rights measures in 1964 (which were started by a Massachusetts Democrat John Fitzgerald Kennedy). Many southern Democrats decided to back Barry Goldwater, a conservative Republican during the ’64 election over Johnson. While Thurmond continued to be elected by his home state history has offered a conflicting view of his past. Some good. Some bad. Being a segregationist will be something he’ll always be known for. In this case maybe politicians can be traded. Over time, the Democrats and the Republicans have switched stations on many issues. Entire Political parties have flip-flopped. In fact, it is often par for the course. The problem is many voters don’t take the time to look into this.

On a local level, former Governor and Senator John Chafee was often considered a bit too moderate by his own Republican Party. Remember, Chafee played a key role in voting against removing President Clinton from office over the Lewinsky affair. Today, his son often gets heat for being too timid or a flip-flopper (it actually cost him an election). I could go on and on regarding loyalty and flip-flopping, but won’t. It seems that being intransient is valued commodity in party politics. However, in practice flip-flopping is a given.

It appears as though keeping your original stance and/or being in line with one’s party takes precedence over thought-based change. Is winning so important? I understand the whole getting elected thing but Niccolo Machiavelli would love this stuff. It’s been said that one key aspect of intelligence is being able to juggle two opposing dynamics and somehow come up with a conclusion that makes sense (a bit of paraphrase). Do we want politics to make sense–or do we want it to reflect our emotions and belief sets?  The Philosopher, Arthur Schopenhauer wrote “Everyone takes the limits of his own vision for the limits of the world.” Would we want our kids growing up to think this way?

So, what does all of this tell us? There is a lot of emotion in politics and sports. Both can bring out the best and worst of our species. Sometimes it’s about money. Sometimes it’s about image. Politics and sports while often run by people who desire power are at their core both beautiful. Sports can teach us things like teamwork, effort, respect and having some fun. Politics can teach us about caring and service to others. Who we cheer for does matter. It tells us a little about ourselves. Stephen Douglas (a rival of Lincoln’s who gave us the Kansas-Nebraska Act and a Democrat) once was kind enough to hold Abe’s hat at his swearing in. Later, Douglas would say that “if I can’t be the President I might as well hold his hat.” Douglas said that with humor but also offered up a sense of civility despite his defeat. Ah–civility, now that’s an interesting concept. It’s certainly something that our society needs a bit more of these days.

In the end, root for your team and vote for the candidate you feel represents the country best. And while there might not be an ‘I’ in team there are two of them in politics. They should stand for imagination and integrity. Mark Twain once asserted “You can’t depend on your eyes when your imagination is out of focus.” A broader approach just might reveal new insights. Until next time.

The Democrat in Name Only State: Rhode Island


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Ask any conservative and they’ll tell you that the state’s problems are inextricably linked to the dominance of Democrats. This is not untrue, but what they aren’t telling you is that many of the Democrats in the General Assembly are more closely aligned with their own ideology than that of the party’s typical platform.

Our reporting on ALEC this week brought that rarely-mentioned truism to the center of debate this week. Not only is ALEC’s lone Democrat on its board of directors Woonsocket’s own Jon Brien. But for a supposedly liberal state, ALEC has no small toe hold on our General Assembly – more than 20 percent of legislators are members, and half of them are Democrats.

Ian Donnis, of Rhode Island Public Radio, picked up on the theme writing, “Rhode Island might rank among the most bluest states, but you wouldn’t know it from the General Assembly.”

By way of example, he cites our ALEC reporting, last year’s voter ID bill (not surprisingly, that effort was spearheaded by Brien) and the legislative leaderships’ reluctance to embrace income tax increases as a way to get out of debt, noting that, “Speaker Fox and Senate President Paiva Weed seem in tune with Chamber of Commerce types.”

David Sharfenberg of the Phoenix compared Smith Hill legislators’ stance on tax policy to that of their congressional counterparts, writing:

Senator Sheldon Whitehouse got all kinds of attention for his “Buffett Rule” push, calling on the wealthy to “pay their fair share.” Meanwhile, on Smith Hill, the General Assembly seems all but certain to kill legislation that would raise taxes on the rich.

It’s as good an illustration as any of the striking gulf between state- and federal-level politics in Rhode Island – the former rather conservative, the latter pretty liberal.

While Sharfenberg notes that this phenomenon is particularly acute in Woonsocket, Pawtucket and Tiverton, I would add all of Rhode Island save for South County and the West Bay to the list – though Woonsocket is certainly ground zero for conservative Democrats.

Consider this comment posted by Jef Nickerson, who blogs at Greater City: PVD:

“Is there a decoder-ring for the different flavors of “Democrat” in this state,” he wrote. “Moderate-Democrat, Conservative-Democrat, Rightwing-Democrat, Woonsocket-Democrat.”

And similarly, a nonpartisan State House insider, who asked not to be identified, said to me earlier in the week, “In Woonsocket, Democrat is French for Republican.”

But while Woonsocket is the poster child for DINO’s (Democrats in name only), it by no means lays the only claim to a share of this market.

There’s also Karen MacBeth, of Cumberland, who is sponsoring the ultrasound bill that would make it both more onerous for women to get an abortion, and more humbling. And who can forget Rep. Peter Palumbo, who called Jessica Ahlquist “an evil little thing” for sticking up for the Constitution rather than religion in the case of the Cranston prayer banner.

Or how about House Speaker Gordon Fox, who is openly gay, and didn’t fight for marriage equality last legislative session. He’s only slightly less conservative than Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, who is well known for valuing Catholics more than constituents.

And these are just the most vocal and recently public examples; there’s also: Doc Corvese of North Providence, Peter Petrarca of Johnston, John Edwards of Portsmouth, Peter Martin of Newport and, of course, Nick Mattiello of Cranston … the list goes on and on…

Anyone who tells you this state is controlled by the political left or organized labor may as well be trying to sell you swampland in Florida. It’s simply not true anymore. For evidence of as much one need look no farther than most popular politicians in the state – Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and Treasurer Gina Raimondo – both of whom are most well known for taking on the unions. And in case you haven’t noticed, it’s been years since organized labor won a meaningful battle at the State House.

So while conservatives scoff at the notion that there is any relationship between tax cuts to the rich and the Rhode Island’s high unemployment rate (even though the correlation completely undercuts the job creator myth that so many of them espouse), it’s getting harder and harder to ignore the simple fact that as Rhode Island moves to the right it’s economy keeps getting weaker and weaker.

Political Parties Should Invite Voters into Process


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The 2008 Democratic National Convention

In case you hadn’t heard, 3% of potential voters turned out in Rhode Island’s presidential primary on April 24th. Rhode Island runs open primaries, where unaffiliated voters can temporarily affiliate on primary day with the party of their choice, so virtually every voter but those registered as Moderates had the ability to vote. The two primaries were different affairs, though, so each has their own issues.

On the Democratic side, only Barack Obama was available (or no one/write-in). But all the available delegates were pledged to Obama. This means that all delegates were going to vote for Obama anyways. So in this case, why care who goes? Since 1968, Democrats have ensured that they wouldn’t ever have to face the chaos of a brokered convention again, de-emphasizing the importance of the delegates.

On the Republican side, the math has essentially made Mitt Romney the victor this primary season. Though Ron Paul managed to pick up some delegates, even RI GOP chair Mark Zaccaria was worried at the low turnout.

It appears to me that the parties are facing a lack of enthusiasm, though RI Tea Party founder Colleen Conley assures me on Twitter that the Tea Party (not really a political party) will crush the Democrats in November. I’m skeptical.

There’s not much to get excited about this election season. My college broke out into a spontaneous celebration in November 2008, and I remember thinking, finally, we won. Now that just seems naive. Neither base can be truly energized when it’s essentially to go vote against someone. We need to want to vote for something.

I think part of the problem is that parties aren’t really distinct parties anymore. If you register as a Democrat, are you actually involved in the Democrats? Do you get to set the platform of your local party? Do you elect the party leadership? Do you decide who will become Speaker of the House if they’re in the majority? Of course not. Only two types of people make those decisions in a modern American political party; party apparatchiks and political candidates.

So when you register as a Democrat, you’re not actually a member of the Democratic Party, you are a voter affiliated with the Democratic Party. Yes, you can select its candidates (a privilege made less relative by open primaries), but you’re essentially powerless over the operations of the party. This is why organizations like the Progressive Democrats of America exist, to counteract the party establishment. This is also why some states have moved towards the jungle primary, essentially making parties vestigial organs.

Parties don’t have to be organized like this. It would be perfectly possible to make a political party function as a democratic organization; where the chair and the leadership are elected by all of the party’s members. The same thing could happen for legislative delegations; the Rhode Island Democrats could be allowed to select who they want to be Speaker of the House or President of the Senate in an election, choosing between candidates from among the Democratic representatives and senators. Party platforms could likewise be suggested and voted upon by party members in the same way a ballot question appears; “would you like the Democratic Party to include in its values a commitment to the equal rights of LGBTQ citizens, including the right of marriage?”

So yes, the criticism that political parties don’t represent the people is accurate; they don’t even represent the people who are registered as their voters. Because those aren’t their members. Their members are the networkers and the political players who really burrow deep inside of the party. And yes, they get paid poorly and have pretty crappy jobs. They get to inhabit these positions because they step up to the plate.

But at the end of the day, if you want your voters to have enthusiasm for their party, if you want them to turn out to the polls no matter the situation, you have to give them agency. It’s the same reason that the Green Bay Packers have their seats sold out for a century; by making the team owned by the fans, they gave their fans agency in their organization. Political parties need to demand participation, open discussion, and activity from their members. They cannot afford to take them for granted.

Democrats Send Progressives To Convention


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Logo for RI Democratic Party

Congratulations to the delegate candidates who won an opportunity to go to the Democratic National Convention in yesterday’s primary. While overall turnout may have been low, it seems as if progressives got out the vote as all but two of our endorsed candidates prevailed.

Anne Connor, whom we profiled, received more overall votes than former Providence Mayor Joe Paolino, who took out an ad in the ProJo (though he did spell the president’s name wrong in it). She even got more votes than him in his hometown of Providence – and she lives in suburban Barrington.

Conservative, anti-union Democrat Doug Gablinske received the fewest votes in CD1

In CD2, the three progressive members of the General Assembly – Josh Miller, Frank Ferri and Teresa Tanzi netted nearly 1,000 more overall votes than the three Weiner candidates, an affluent family from East Greenwich known for being political insiders and regulars at the party convention.

For a complete list of results, click here.

The winners are below, including total number of votes they garnered and percentage.

UPDATE: RI Future Publisher Emeritus Matt Jerzyk writes that our delegate results isn’t accurate because Democratic rules for the representing candidates at the convention employ a sort of affirmative action in which the top 5 men and top 6 women from each district are chosen. As such, these are the results according to Jerzyk:

The top 5 men and top 6 women in each CD are elected – not just the top 11.  That would mean the following won yesterday:

CD-1

  • Myrth YORK
  • Julie E. MEYERS
  • Anne W. CONNOR
  • Joseph R. PAOLINO, JR.
  • Onna A. MONIZ-JOHN
  • Mary A. GASBARRO
  • June S. SPEAKMAN
  • Brett P. SMILEY
  • Tom CODERRE
  • Gerald Pedro CARVALHO
  • David A. SALVATORE

CD-2

  • Joshua MILLER
  • Patrick T. FOGARTY
  • Teresa TANZI
  • Frank G. FERRI
  • Elaine PRIOR
  • Michael A. SOLOMON
  • L. Susan WEINER
  • Mark S. WEINER
  • Elisa M. POLLARD
  • Helen S. TAYLOR
  • Zoe I. WEINER

CD1

Myrth YORK 2831 10.4%
Julie E. MEYERS 2153 7.9%
Anne W. CONNOR 2061 7.6%
Joseph R. PAOLINO, JR. 1986 7.3%
Onna A. MONIZ-JOHN 1880 6.9%
Mary A. GASBARRO 1833 6.7%
June S. SPEAKMAN 1776 6.5%
Brett P. SMILEY 1763 6.5%
Rebecca Kim MEARS 1694 6.2%
Tom CODERRE 1640 6.0%
Gerald Pedro CARVALHO 1369 5.0%

CD2

Joshua MILLER 1313 7.8%
Patrick T. FOGARTY 1272 7.6%
Teresa TANZI 1233 7.3%
Frank G. FERRI 1137 6.8%
Elaine PRIOR 1131 6.7%
Michael A. SOLOMON 1109 6.6%
L. Susan WEINER 1033 6.1%
Mark S. WEINER 1007 6.0%
Thomas J. IZZO 990 5.9%
Ryan Patrick KELLEY 986 5.9%
Elisa M. POLLARD 972 5.8%

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)

 


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