Progress Report: Elastic Rhode Island; Mark Schwager, Typical Candidate; More Binder v. Fox; Kerr on Grinding


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Graphic courtesy of FiveThirtyEight.

Rhode Island, says New York Times number-crunching blog FiveThirtyEight, is the most politically elastic state, meaning that “a large swatch of its electorate are persuadable voters unaligned with either political party.”In a separate piece on political elasticity Nate Silver describes elastic states as “those which have a lot of swing voters — that is, voters who could plausibly vote for either party’s candidate.”

It’s one of the reasons, FiveThirtyEight reports, that we elect a lot of Democrats to the General Assembly and a lot of Republicans to the governor’s office. (We haven’t had a Democratic governor in almost 20 years!)

But it’s also one of the reasons why our hugely-Democratic legislature generally passes some pretty conservative legislation … Just consider our landmark pension reform law that conservatives around the country are so fond of, or our new voter ID law – we’re the only blue state in the country to have one!

Speaking of State House races … only in East Greenwich (okay, and also Barrington and Greenwich, Conn.) is an upper-middle-class, fiscally-conservative/socially-liberal, white, male professional “not your typical General Assembly candidate” because he is a doctor rather than a lawyer or a businessman! EG needs to diversify like Central Falls needs tax dollars; the difference is one deficiency is debilitating and the other is easy ignore.

The reality is, because of the aforementioned attributes, Dr. Mark Schwager couldn’t be a more demographically typical state legislator. He’s also the best candidate in a three-way race to replace Bob Watson (the outgoing fiscally-conservative/socially-liberal, white, male professional from Agrestic … er, I mean East Greenwich). Schwager’s medical experience would serve the state well on Smith Hill and, even more importantly, he possesses impeccable character – an increasingly rare quality in politicians in particular but also people in general…

…And speaking of upper-middle-class, white East Greenwich professionals with impeccable character, EG owes a huge thank you to Patch Editor Elizabeth McNamara, who covers her community as well as any other reporter in Rhode Island.

Mark Binder says Gordon Fox is for sale. A serious allegation. Now that the ProJo put it on the front page, they ought to go out and ferret out the truth. Grab that list from Binder, call and ask everyone on it what their expectation was for their donation and then let us know what they say.

“Like Lazarus, Cicilline appears to have risen from the ranks of the political dead,” Cook Political Report on the Congressman’s comeback, according to Ted Nesi.

Bob Kerr on grinding: “Come on, people, June and Ward Cleaver left the building a long time ago.”

I’m with Mike Riley on this one … Jim Langevin should have done the WPRO debate with him and Abel Collins.

And here’s another instance of me agreeing with a conservative on a fiscal matter.

 

Progress Report: Binder vs. Fox; Dalai Lama, Springsteen on Progressive Values; WPRI Debate Snobs Get Promoted


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Shaping up to be one of the most interested races for a State House seat, author and RI Future contributor Mark Binder’s challenge to Gordon Fox is attracting a lot of media attention. Fox is more conservative than we’d like in a Speaker and Binder is less experienced than we’d like in a state Representative. Practically speaking, when factoring in both of these circumstances, the House of Representatives probably moves to the right if Binder were to upset Fox.

No one sums up progressive values quite like the Dalai Lama. The Associated Press quotes him as saying, “We are part of humanity. Their problem is my problem. Their happiness is my happiness. We have to look to the interests of others.’’ You can read Steve Ahlquist’s story here.

Another well-spoken progressive, Bruce Springsteen, says conservatives will try to suppress people’s right to vote in an attempt to get Obama out of the White House. The Boss writes in his endorsement of Obama, “I believe that all of us, of whatever views, should be opposing these anti-voter, anti-citizen efforts.”

Speaking of being a well-spoken progressive, the Dalai Lama does not curse when speaking in public.

Abel Collins’ campaign must be fuming about this one: the two WPRI employees most responsible for keeping him out of its debate both got promotions this week, according to RIPR.

Here’s an interesting dilemma: should convicted murderers be allowed to vote? Pressing the issue this campaign season is Rhode Island’s most despised child killer Michael Woodmansee, reports the ProJo.

Tiverton Patch picked up on my post about Justin Katz being too religious and right-wing to be relevant on the Tiverton School Committee.

From the files of etch-a-sketch politics, former Providence Journal reporter Steve Peoples, who now covers the Romney campaign for the Associated Press, writes, “On immigration, taxes and women’s issues, Mitt Romney is abandoning his “severely conservative” talk of the Republican primary season and moving sharply to the political center as he looks to sway on-the-fence voters in the campaign’s final three weeks.”

And this, from the files of deregulation is dangerous.

Today in 1988, sit-com “Roseanne” debuts on ABC. Was this the last time a TV show featured a working class family? Here’s how History.com describes the half-hour comedy:

The show was considered groundbreaking for its realistic portrayal of a working-class family and the issues they faced. Barr’s portrayal of the loud, abrasive, overweight Roseanne Conner was a sharp contrast to the stereotypical TV housewife in the mold of Leave It to Beaver’s June Cleaver and The Brady Bunch’s Carol Brady.

Progress Report: Doherty Ducks Civil Rights Debate; Fox Faces Binder; ProJo Layoffs Imminent; Veep Debate


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Downtown Providence from the Providence River. (Photo by Bob Plain)

If you want to know why Brendan Doherty didn’t want to participate in a debate his fellow CD1 candidates on civil rights issues, try reading the first paragraph of the ProJo’s story.

“The 1st Congressional District candidates who attended this forum agreed on just about everything — that Republicans want to ‘roll back’ reforms that have helped women, that “Obamacare” should be defended, that voter ID laws can discourage people from exercising their right to vote.”

House Speaker Gordon Fox squared off with his opponent Mark Binder, a children’s book author and RI Future contributor, in a taped debate to air later this month. It’s unlikely Binder will knock Fox out of office, but he could help move him back toward the left side of the political spectrum. Or he could do just enough political damage to make it hard for him to retain the Speaker’s gavel, which might not be a good thing for progressives…

How Walmart Workers Could Save the U.S. Economy

Rhode Island should be very concerned about how seemingly imminent layoffs at the Providence Journal will affect our state. Cutting the staff will only help corporate profits in Dallas; it will be an all-round bad thing for us.

Interesting that a states’ rights group from Colorado is backing Gov. Chafee’s fight to return Jason Pleau to Rhode Island custody. As I’ve said before, local small government advocates seem only to want small government when it comes to protecting the trickle down economy.

Here’s a great Joe Biden moment from last night:

And a great exchange that sums up if not last night’s veep debate, perhaps this latest chapter of the POTUS campaign:

JOE BIDEN: This is a bunch of stuff. Look, here’s the deal.

MARTHA RADDATZ: What does that mean, a bunch of stuff?

BIDEN: Well, it means it’s simply inaccurate.

PAUL RYAN: It’s Irish.

BIDEN: It — it is. We Irish call it malarkey.

And here’s the Huffington Post’s takeaway on the debate:

Joe Biden did everything President Barack Obama did not last week, and a good bit more.

The vice president dominated the spotlight in the only debate between himself and Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.), charging at Republican Mitt Romney’s running mate from the get-go and bombarding him with a flurry of eye rolls, interjections and accusations.

What it accomplished among undecided voters, if anything, is hard to tell and will take days to sort out. Two instant surveys of Americans watching the debate — one by CBS, one by CNN — showed mixed results. But since vice presidential debates often have a negligible impact on the overall race anyway, Biden’s sometimes over-the-top performance probably accomplished what he appeared intent on doing: rallying the Democratic base after Obama’s woeful debate performance last week.

Bad Week for Gordon Fox


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It’s not a great week to be Gordon Fox. As his leadership team is literally crumbling around him, his political opponent Mark Binder is stepping up his campaign.

Problems with Fox’s leadership team have been mounting for weeks now. Two of the most conservative members of the team lost in primaries: Peter Petrarca and Jon Brien. And, John McCauley, who recently pleaded guilty to two tax-related felonies, isn’t running for reelection.

Then yesterday, Whip Patrick O’Neil resigned.

In a letter to Fox, O’Neil said he was stepping down, in part, because, “there are glaring signs that the leadership team is neither working together to bring about real change not has a clear plan for addressing the issues this state is facing.”

O’Neil, by the way, was the highest ranking legislator to support tax equity legislation last session – and he’d love to be the next Speaker.

All this as former friend and ally Jeff Britt is now running Binder’s campaign.

Binder, a frequent RI Future contributor, has a piece in the ProJo today which makes a pretty pointed accusation of Fox: “Again and again, the speaker uses his power to rule by fiat and whim.”

He cites Fox’s inside information about the 38 Studios deal, the strange and silent death of the popular payday loan bill and the surprise of the budget bill this year: consolidating the board that oversees elementary and secondary education with the one that oversees higher education.

About that last example, Binder writes:

Despite a promise to present legislation in an “orderly” manner to help the house “fully vet and consider the information” at the close of the session, Gordon Fox and his Band of Merry Men rammed through the mash-up of the Board of Governors for Higher Education and the Board of Regents for Elementary and Secondary Education into a single committee. No public discussion, no debate about its merits or potential problems. Just put it in the budget and vote for it.

And Binder says he will turn over evidence to the State Police showing that House spokesman Larry Berman is illegally serving as Fox’s campaign spokesman as well. Some of Binder’s evidence that Berman is doing work for Fox’s campaign includes reports from this website, as well as many other media reports.

Every political reporter in Rhode Island knows Berman, technically the spokesperson for the Speaker’s office, is also the de facto spokesman for Fox’s campaign. I’m not even sure if Fox has an official campaign spokesperson outside of Berman.  If David Cicilline did as much, who by the way has a separate campaign spokesperson from his congressional staff, you’d likely see many more pixels devoted to it.

Fox did manage to eek out some positive press this week too. At the ProJo’s Publick Occurrences forum last night, Alix and Ani CEO Giovanni Feroce made an off-color comment not unlike Mitt Romney’s 47 percent comment. Here’s the ProJo’s coverage of the exchange:

Just as the two-hour event started winding down, things heated up between Giovanni Feroce, CEO of jewelry company Alex and Ani, and House Speaker Gordon Fox. Feroce, who had complained earlier that the nation “has created a work force that doesn’t know how to work,” went even further in response to a question from the audience, saying, “I don’t understand when it became fashionable to not work.”

Fox responded that 59,000 Rhode Islanders aren’t out of work because they’re “lazy and shiftless” but rather because the state has failed to connect them to jobs.

“If we do a better job connecting them,” said Fox, “we will create the best products in the world.”

Rep. Dickinson Attacks Speaker Fox, Cronyism


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Rep. Spencer Dickinson (Democrat – District 35, South Kingstown)

Unless you live in the area, you’re probably not paying much attention to the primary race between incumbent Representative Spencer Dickinson and South Kingstown Councilwoman Kathleen Fogarty in District 35.

I wasn’t, until I was randomly perusing Anchor Rising, and saw this series on Mr. Dickinson’s five-page mailer to constituents outlining the issues he sees in the State House, and specifically those under the reign of Speaker Gordon Fox. Merely due to formatting issues, I recommend reading the unmodified PDF version.

Mr. Dickinson, according to his Wikipedia page, previously served from 1973 to 1980, attaining the post of Deputy Majority Leader. So when you read the letter, it’s important to keep that in context. Mr. Dickinson isn’t some political neophyte shocked at what they’ve discovered; he is describing a system that does not have to exist, and has first hand knowledge of an alternative.

There’s a lot to unpack in the letter, but notably that Kimball Brace, the consultant behind the recent redistricting process, was also involved in a 1982 redistricting process that triggered a suspension of election for the Rhode Island Senate. Why? Because they were found to be attempting to remove a political opponent through gerrymandering, which Mr. Dickinson alleges Speaker Fox is trying to do to not only him, but also Representatives Rene Menard and Robert DaSilva.

DaSilva decided not to seek reelection, and instead to challenge Senator Daniel DaPonte for the Democratic primary. That race could be considered a proxy battle between the opposing sides in the battle over state worker pensions.

The primary race in District 35 appears to not be as lofty. In Mr. Dickinson’s telling, the reason is purely to provide a pliable legislator for the House leadership, something that Mr. Dickinson has incidentally decided not to be. It shouldn’t be called corruption (suspect redistricting process that lopped a hefty proportion of Mr. Dickinson’s supporters out of his district aside), but it is political maneuvering.

Mr. Dickinson may have just emerged as the most clear-spoken critic of Speaker Fox and leadership. He’s doubly powerful, not only because of his affiliation as a good Democrat, but also from the vantage point of his time as a Deputy Majority Leader. In a great many ways, Mr. Dickinson appears to have taken the blunt “throw all the bums out” refrain when discussing the failures of the General Assembly and sharped it.

What Mr. Dickinson is describing is an institutional culture problem. Rhode Island’s is particularly bad, because it stretches back centuries; those corrupt Democrats of years past learned all about corruption from the Republicans who’d practiced it on them before (the state GOP garnered the “for sale, and cheap label” so often quoted about RI’s corruption problems). But it’s not just corruption that we need fear. Good people can be placed in bad institutional cultures and then do bad things.

This should be a fear of every progressive, or anyone who believes in that there are principled legislators in the General Assembly (full disclosure: I do). An institutional culture can co-opt even good people. Rookie legislators come in, learn the system, and then practice and refine it on others. It’s easy to bargain away the good. ‘I’m just doing this to get my good bill passed,’ a legislator may think, ‘if I don’t play ball, it won’t ever see the light of day.’

It’s an understandable way of thinking. It’s also wrong. I believe Matthew 16:26 puts it succinctly: “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?”

We need more Spencer Dickinsons in office, it appears; people unafraid to keep their souls. At its root, that should be the foundations of a credible opposition. There are two ways to take power: by gaming the system, greasing the right palms, and working your way to the top; or; by smashing through, criticizing, working with other opposition members until the electorate hands you a bunch of like-minded people and you can take power after doing your time in the wilderness.

Anyhow, I could go on, but if you read Mr. Dickinson’s letter, and felt it was good, and wish more people would speak up about their experiences in the legislature like this, his contact info is on his website. On September 12th, win or lose, give him a call or send him an email and tell him about your response to his mailing. Personally, I wish more of our legislators had the courage to express their feelings like this.

P.S. A television camera in the Speaker’s office would be brilliant!

Gordon Fox Is ‘Miffed’ at RI Future


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The ProJo reports that House Speaker Gordon Fox, or at least his staff, is “miffed” that Mark Binder, who is challenging him for his seat in the House, is blogging about it for RI Future. Who can blame him? I’m sure Fox would much prefer to run either unopposed or against a candidate that doesn’t write for a local news website. (Here’s a piece I wrote this weekend about why we allow candidates to blog on RI Future.)

Well, we’re a little miffed, too. Here’s why:

The Providence Journal misreports Binder’s role with RI Future. Political Scene says this morning that Binder is “now a columnist for a left-leaning website.” But at least one of the authors of the weekly political column knows this isn’t accurate – Binder was a contributor long before he declared for office. In response to an email from Kathy Gregg last week about Binder’s role with RI Future, I wrote, “Mark was an RI Future contributor before declaring for office.” Our archives corroborate this as well – so does his post that the column quoted.

On this point, we believe the newspaper owes its readers a correction. To incorrectly claim that Binder is a new RI Future writer gives credence to the false claim that we are targeting Fox. Projo readers should absolutely be informed that the Speaker’s staff thinks this, but they should know that there is evidence to the contrary.

We’re also a little bit miffed with Fox’s spokesman Larry Berman, who told the Projo that RI Future “has chosen to target one of the most progressive Speakers of the House in modern history.”

This is not at all the case. Berman and I had several long and heated discussions about Binder’s role with RI Future last week, and I explained to him what was in my other piece this morning on why candidates blog for RI Future and what was in my email to Gregg: It isn’t an endorsement, Fox is more than welcome to blog as well and candidates’ posts are about giving Rhode Islanders access to information about the progressive movement, not picking winners or losers.

We’re not targeting Fox. In fact, we wholeheartedly agree with Berman’s description that he is one of the most progressive speakers in recent history. We’re giving a progressive the ability to express his message to Rhode Islanders. That’s what RI Future does! The converse would be to silence one of our contributors because he is taking on a powerful member of the establishment, something that I think would be unfair both to the small business we are trying to get off the ground and to the people of Rhode Island.

Some have suggested to me that there will be political ramifications for giving a political opponent of the Speaker of the House, known as the most powerful person in state government, a platform. I don’t think there will be. I believe that Gordon Fox and his staff respect greatly the rights of a free and open press as well as a diversity of voices in the local marketplace of ideas.

Speaker Fox Says He Will Push for Marriage Equality


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House Speaker Gordon Fox says he will push for marriage equality in the next legislative session, according to Ted Nesi of WPRI.

“It’s one of those issues that I need to come back, we need to address, and I intend if I’m elected speaker to address it early,” Fox said during a taping of Newsmakers today.

Fox, who is gay, enraged the progressive community when he didn’t allow same sex marriage to come to a vote on the House floor in 2011. He has said it was a very difficult decision given his personal stake in the matter. Insiders say Fox didn’t call the vote because he knew it wouldn’t pass in the Senate, and many House members didn’t want to be put on record if the bill wasn’t going to pass.

Regardless, with his announcement today, he seems to have mended some of the fences he broke with the progressive community.

“We appreciate Speaker Fox’s commitment to finally calling a vote on marriage equality and look forward to working with him to pass this important civil rights legislation early in the next session,” said Ray Sullivan of Marriage Equality of Rhode Island. “Under Speaker Fox and Gov. Chafee’s leadership, all eyes will turn to the Senate, where there is a wide coalition working to ensure that a pro-equality majority is elected.”

Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed does not support marriage equality for Rhode Island, and there is substantial resistance to the idea outside of her in the Senate. Here’s the story we wrote about marriage equality in the Senate in early June.

And here’s my video from 2011 of Fox talking about why he didn’t push for marriage equality:

On Your Mark: Binder To Blog About Candidacy


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Mark Binder is running against Gordon Fox.

On Wednesday, I filed the papers to become a candidate for State Representative from the Fourth District in Providence, RI. I’m running against House Speaker Gordon Fox.

Today, I’m blogging about it. Welcome to the third turn of the 2012 political race.

This blog will follow my campaign. I’ll be writing about the challenges, triumphs and breakdowns as they happen.

Disclosure: Yes, I’m running for office, so everything I write will probably be self-serving and “designed” to get me elected. Take it all with a grain of salt. (Or sodium substitute.)

Asking For Votes – “Mark Your Ballot for Mark Binder”

The worst part of the job, aside from fundraising (see below), is asking for votes. I have to ask you—and all your friends— to vote for me. It’s the job. If I don’t ask, chances are, you won’t vote for me.

This morning, as I was meditating down by the river in my favorite part of my district, two lovely ladies sat in the chair behind me. When I was done, we chatted for a while, I asked for their votes. Turns out, neither was in my district. Oh well.

According to the Secretary of State’s office, in the last Presidential Election, my opponent received 4,899 votes to the 1,271 of his challenger. I’ll need about 3,500 votes to win. There are roughly 10,000 registered voters in District Four. That’s one out of three.

Mark your calendar, November 6, 2012. Mark your ballot for Mark Binder.

Logistics

To get on the ballot in Rhode Island is a two-part process.

  1. You need to file a “Declaration of Candidacy” in a 3 day period.
  2. On July 3, I have to pick up nomination papers and begin to collect signatures. For the office I’m running (Representative in General Assembly), I need to collect a whopping 50  signatures of registered voters in my district. (When I ran for US House of Representatives it was 500 signatures. US Senator takes 1,000.) These signatures need to be returned to City Hall by the end of business, July 19.

That’s it. Seems easy, doesn’t it. So why am I the only person running against Gordon Fox?

Why am I running?

I watched a TV news interview of Gordon Fox being asked about the 38 Studios disaster. Yes, Mr. Fox was put on the spot. No, he doesn’t know how a video game company run by an ex-ball player blew through millions of dollars in such a short period of time.

But it was my money and your money and his money that was gambled away.

One thing I know is that I never would have voted for the 38 Studios guarantee. I have been working with and around computers my whole life. I have watched the dot-com bubble burst. Plus I’m sick of corporations extracting tax benefits and giving back squat.

Well, how would I boost the RI Economy?

I don’t know. Not yet. Over the next few months, I’m going to be talking with a lot of people, and listening. And thinking.

There are so many issues that become more challenging when you think about actually doing the job.

For instance, a recent article in the Providence Journal challenged that the State of Rhode Island wasn’t promoting tourism enough. Is that government’s job? If “The State” had created an ad campaign that failed, whose fault would it be? And so on.

Email me your ideas (candidate@markbinder.com)

My first flip-flop

I’m a liberal-progressive-leaning Chafee-style independent. I reserve the right to change my mind. So…

Since the first political piece I published for RI Future was called, “Why I’m (not) Running for Congress,” I thought I should at least address the “I don’t really want the job” component.

1) One of the more distasteful aspects of politics is the fundraising and the web of IOUs it creates. While I am not swearing off fundraising, I don’t plan on making that my job.

The area of my district is small. I live here. I will be walking the district, door to door, introducing myself, asking questions, answering questions, and listening.

Currently, I am not accepting contributions, but I would like help, support and encouragement.

2) My ego hasn’t changed significantly. It’s big, but I’m neither politically hungry nor ambitious. I would like to serve my country, my state and my community and help change the political climate here in Rhode Island. Perhaps there are better qualified candidates, but I don’t see them stepping up.

Maybe it’s an impossible task — to take the entrenched system, work with in it to fix it, and leave our state in a better place to cope with the 21st Century.

Maybe. But I know it’s not going to happen unless we begin to stop complaining and start rising to the challenges.

More to come.

Are Tides Turning Toward Tax Equity Legislation?


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URI students lobbied state legislators last night at the State House on the Miller-Cimini tax equity bill that would raise income taxes on Rhode Island’s richest residents. And the bill might just be gaining traction.

I asked Speaker Gordon Fox about its chances for passage after the session.

“I’m not going to say yes no or anything at this point,” he said.

Really? When last I asked the speaker about tax equity legislation earlier this month he gave me a pretty unequivocal no, saying, “At this point I’m closing the door on doing anything with income tax until we have a little more historical evidence about what’s going with the reforms we did a few years ago.”

Does that mean the tides are turning for the bill that would raise the top income tax bracket back up to 9.9 percent? Fox cautioned me not to draw that conclusion. “Don’t read into my remarks,” he said. “At this point, that is my standard.”

He also mentioned the $130 million deficit the state faces this budget season. The bill is estimated to raise an additional $118 million in revenue.

Meanwhile, the state’s unemployment rate is rising again for the first time in eight months. The Miller-Cimini tax equity bill offers an incentive to affluent job creators: for every one percentage point the unemployment rate goes down so would the tax rate for those making more than $250,000 annually until they both fall to 5.9 percent.

And if Fox and the rest of the General Assembly is looking for other new sources of revenue for the state, they may want to reconsider marriage equality. It turns out, according to a new report, that letting gay couples enjoy the same rights as others would mean an additional million dollars in tax revenue.

Payday Lenders Hire Power Broker Bill Murphy


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Former Speaker of the House Bill Murphy (photo by Ryan T. Conaty: ryantconaty.com)

One of the most interesting battles going on in the state house this year is over the fate of the “payday lending” industry. Payday loans are short-term loans, typically arranged something like this: I loan you $100 now in return for $110 taken from your next paycheck in a couple of weeks.

This sounds good, unless you do the math and notice that this works out to about a 260% annual interest rate.  If you don’t, it’s likely enough that in two weeks you’ll ask for an extension, and it only takes a couple of dozen like you and suddenly my business is booming.  And there are a lot more customers than that around here.

It wasn’t legal to charge interest rates that high until an exception to usury laws was carved out for check-cashing businesses in 2001. According to Margaux Morisseau, who is spearheading the effort to repeal this exception, payday lenders in Rhode Island now write over 140,000 of these loans each year, totaling $50 million, the bulk of which are written by Advance America, based in South Carolina, and Check ‘n Go, nominally based in Ohio, though it might be controlled by partners based in Texas or London. You can admire the process at rhodeislandpaydayloans.com. My favorite quote:

“When it is due date of your RI payday loan, the loan amount and the service charge will be automatically debited against your pay check. An extension of your RI cash advance is also possible by paying an extension fee.”

There are a couple of interesting points to the story (beside the lack of proofreaders for web content). First, it is consistently astonishing to me both how profitable it can be to exploit poor people — and how many financiers are eager to do so. After all, a huge amount of the financial carnage of the 2008 meltdown was built on liar loans and various kinds of mortgage fraud aimed at sucking wealth from low-income families who hoped to afford a home. (And no, the Community Reinvestment Act had nothing to do with this, as you’ll doubtless read in uninformed comments.)

Obviously there is a risk associated with these kinds of loans, but even assuming a generous loan loss provision, we’re talking about more than doubling one’s investment each year. These are returns investors in more, um, traditional businesses can only dream of.

There’s a bill in the Assembly that would repeal this exception and limit interest to 36% — still awfully high, but in the range that banks charge on some credit cards.  Morisseau has put together an impressive coalition to push it, and Representative Frank Ferri and Senator Juan Pichardo have been very energetic sponsors. Morisseau and Ferri found 50 co-sponsors out of 75 members for the House Version, and she and Pichardo got 25 out of 50 in the Senate. Sounds like a slam-dunk, right?

Wrong. On the other side, Advance America has retained Bill Murphy, the recently retired Speaker of the House.

So what can a retired Speaker do in the face of 50 house members who oppose him?  Sure he knows where a lot of bodies are buried, but what can he possibly hold over so many people?  How is this a fair fight?

Here’s how it works. Murphy’s services are not provided gratis to Advance America. They are paying him $50,000 this year, according to the Secretary of State’s web site. How much work will that entail?  A bunch of phone calls and a handful of meetings. Nice work if you can get it.

And you can get it if you try — so long as you’re a current member of the House or Senate leadership. If Bill Murphy can prove to Advance America that he’s worth $50,000 a year for almost no work, then Speaker Gordon Fox or Majority Leader Nick Mattiello or even Corporations Committee Chair Brian Patrick Kennedy can justifiably claim to be worth the same amount to lobbying clients who happen along after they retire from the House. In other words, killing a bill like this on Bill Murphy’s say-so is key to a big payday for them down the road. Preserving a system that benefits Murphy is the way to keep the trough full at which they might hope someday to feed.

Of course, there are lobbyists who do real work for their money — arranging testimony, doing research, preparing press campaigns — and some of those are even ex-legislators. But the real money is in having a name that can make things happen despite how many are on the other side.

Now in fairness, I have no idea whether Fox, Mattiello, or Kennedy hopes to cash in on their service in this way, and in all likelihood, neither do you. But a very compelling indicator of whether they do is if this bill — sponsored by two-thirds of the House — gets out of committee and onto the House floor for an actual vote. Are the people who control the agendae of the House and Senate interested in a democratically run General Assembly, or is their interest in preserving the system by which ex-legislators profit handsomely from what was, in theory, public service?

Appendix:

For comparison,

Dan Connors, former Senate Majority Leader

George Caruolo, former House Majority Leader

Stephen Alves, former Senate Finance Chair

 

Speaker Fox Says Tax Equity Bill DOA


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Despite nearly half of the House signing onto a bill that would raise taxes on the richest Rhode Islanders, Speaker Gordon Fox said he intends to keep his promise not to touch the income tax structure in this budget cycle.

“At this point I’m closing the door on doing anything with income tax until we have a little more historical evidence about what’s going with the reforms we did a few years ago,” he said.

In 2010, the General Assembly passed a budget proposal put forward by then Governor Don Carcieri to lower the tax rate on those who make more than $100,000 from 9.9 to 5.9. Fox said this will be the first budget year that the General Assembly can see how those tax cuts affect the state’s budget (people are now filing taxes for 2011, the first year the restructured rate was in place). He also said a number of tax exemptions were eliminated when the overall rate was reduced.

“When given all the information I think that a significant number members will support my position on this,” Fox said.

But some legislators, speaking on background, said the bill that would roll back the Carcieri tax cuts for those who make more than $250,000 a year, still has life – though it could look much different if it does pass.

Even Fox, who has described himself as a fiscally conservative Democrat, would not rule out taking another look at the tax code in future budget cycles.

“As we get the empirical data going forward what we’ll do,” he said, “I never want to make any predictions about what we would do in the future, but we’ll see.”

My RIPTA conversation with Gordon Fox


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Yesterday I wrote to Gordon Fox, asking him to help defend, not defund RIPTA. This is what I wrote:

I am writing to you because now is not the time to cut funds to RIPTA, now is the time to increase them. I know this sounds counter-intuitive, but a functioning public transportation system is a strength for the community. Portland Oregon has a strong system, and they are better for it.

Please work on behalf of your constituents and all of RI to strengthen, rather than to weaken RIPTA.

This is perhaps the fourth or fifth email I have sent Gordon Fox. For the first time, he answered me:

Thank you very much for writing to me in support of an amendment to the state budget offered by Representative Jay O’Grady regarding funding at DOT and RIPTA.  Although I could not support the amendment this year due to the severe budget constraints, I have pledged to work with Reps. O’Grady, Arthur Handy and Teresa Tanzi in the future to continue our efforts to improve our state’s transportation system.

Meanwhile, I was proud to support Article 22 of the budget, which has now been signed into law, which creates a transportation trust fund and provides that incremental increases of transportation-related surcharges will be dedicated to the fund.  It will also reduce DOT’s reliance on borrowing and transition us to a pay-as-you-go system.

I appreciate your sentiments, and I thank you again for taking the time to write about this important issue.

The response was of course unsatisfactory, and indicative of the kind of politician Gordon Fox is. It is unsatisfactory because it does nothing to answer Fox’s complicity in the cuts RIPTA is planning. The loss of revenues to RI businesses and families will be devastating to our already fragile economy. It is indicative of the way Gordon Fox oprates because he does not take a stand on an issue, he simply pledges to “work with” those who have decided to.

Fox’s support for Article 22 of the budget is a rather silly statement. he voted for the budget, so he tacitly supported all the provisions therein. In owning the one small part of the budget that will give some of the funds from the Registry of Motor Vehicles to the DOT and RIPTA, he hopes to artificially inflate his support in the public’s eyes.

There’s a curious thing about Article 22. Under it, 20% of the monies collected in 2012 by the Registry of Motor Vehicles will go towards the “Intermodal Surface Transportation Fund” and this figure will increase each year by 20% until all collected monies are so directed. Fair enough. But this year we also passed the Voter ID bill, so we can expect that, under the increased onus of free IDs, revenues from the Registry will go down. After all, free means more people, longer lines, and less monies collected.


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