Wingmen: Three-way races and instand run-off voting


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wingmenThree-way races seem to dominate gubernatorial elections in Rhode Island.

Current Governor Linc Chafee won a three-way race in 2010 with just 36 percent of the vote – almost twice as many people voted against him as for him. In the Democratic primary this year, Gina Raimondo won 42 percent of the vote while 58 percent of voters opted for someone else. In this year’s general election, Republicans fear Bob Healey will peal votes away from Allan Fung, making it even harder for him to compete against Raimondo.

So on NBC10 Wingmen this week, Justin Katz, Bill Rappleye and I debated the merits of instant run-off voting – an electoral system in which voters can prioritize their choices in a field of more than two candidates. Watch our conversation about IRV and then lean even more about it here.

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DePetro, Carcieri, Healey at Odeum: Two thumbs down


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That's Anthony Gemma working the crowd before the John DePetro event at the Odeum Theater in downtown East Greenwich. (Photo by Bob Plain)
That’s Anthony Gemma working the crowd before the John DePetro event at the Odeum Theater in downtown East Greenwich. (Photo by Bob Plain)

Yesterday I thought it would be hard to put together a group of people who have been worse for Rhode Island than John DePetro, Don Carcieri and Bernie Healey. But Anthony Gemma proved me wildly off base by showing up as well.

If you missed my live-tweeting of conservative Catholic night at the Odeum Theater on Main Street, East Greenwich last night, don’t worry. You didn’t miss much.

The most exciting moments included DePetro probing Father Healey about whether or not people chew gum in church, Feroce scrolling through his smart phone to read aloud from his email or Carcieri talking about 38 Studios. Oh, that’s right, DePetro didn’t ask Carcieri about 38 Studios; instead they talked about how idyllic life was back in the days when Thanks Don was growing up.

I’m pretty sure Charlie Rose’s job is safe.

It was really more of a fundraiser for the struggling local theater than actual entertainment. Many, if not most, of the attendees were dyed-in-the-wool conservatives and more than a few were friends and/or relatives of the headliners. DePetro made more references to the local restaurant that sponsored the evening than he did to leadership, which was supposed to be the focus of the event.  Local celebrity appearances were limited to former state Senator Frank Maher and Anthony Gemma.

Here’s a Storify of most of my tweets from last night and many of the responses I got.

DePetro, Carcieri, Healey in East Greenwich tonight


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depetroI saw my ideological nemesis and neighbor John DePetro on Main Street here in East Greenwich the other day. “What’s going on, John?” I said to him. To which he replied, “I have nothing to say to you.”

Then he added as he walked away, “I’ll see you in court.”

I’m assuming he means for the sexual harassment suit our former colleague Dee DeQuattro has filed against him, but who knows. Experience tells me the truth is usually the opposite of what John DePetro says it is, so perhaps I won’t see him in court. Though I do know he appeared before the state Human Rights Commission for the allegation recently. So on the other hand, maybe I will see him in court.

Either way, I plan to see him tonight night when he hosts a panel discussion with former governor Don Carcieri, Catholic priest and State House lobbyist Bernard Healey and former GOP state senator and Alix and Ani CEO John Feroci at the Odeum Theater, also on Main Street in East Greenwich.

This is a pretty tight-knit group. The evening is being sponsored by Besos, a new local restaurant. The owners are very good friends with both Feroce and the Carcieri family (in fact, they bought the former governor’s downtown mcmansion from him). All of participants belong to the local Catholic church, where Healey is the priest.

Coincidentally, these conservative Catholics were booked by a liberal Jew. Frank Prosnitz, former ProJo and Providence Business News editor, has been leading the local effort to revitalize the Odeum for years. He’s managed to get the doors open, but with renovation bills now due he’s turned to this conservative cabal to help bring in some revenue. It will certainly be interesting to see what kind of crowd this group attracts.

I don’t know Feroce too well, though I did meet him years ago when I was in college and he was in the state senate. Bernie Healey is best known for lobbying State House leaders against marriage equality. Carcieri used his two terms as governor to advocate against immigrants, equality, poor people and the public sector. Few Republicans have been willing to defend him since he left office and his infamously failed scheme to give his friend Curt Schilling public money to make a video game has rendered him one of the least popular local politicians in recent memory. DePetro is widely regarded as the most mean-spirited and dishonest person in Rhode Island politics and/or media.

Alex and Ani aside, it’d be hard to put together a trio that has done more damage to Rhode Island than Carcieri, DePetro and Healey. I wish the local theater much luck, but this seems like more evidence things aren’t going well for the Odeum.

How the right pushes for exemptions to equality


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marriage equality RallyMarriage equality advocates took lot of hope from April 8th’s front page ProJo article in which Senate President M. Teresa Paiva Weed anticipated “a full Senate vote on whether to legalize same-sex marriage by the end of April.”  Good news indeed, but one needs to continue reading for the unpleasant bit.

Paiva Weed is concerned that the bill’s religious exemptions may be inadequate, and would like to see more comprehensive exemptions. But if marriage equality is the goal, and so-called conscience clauses allow same-sex couples to be discriminated against by wedding photographers, bakeries, flower shops and rental halls, then in what sense will gay marriage be equal?

A sense can be formed of Paiva Weed’s thoughts on this issue. The ProJo reports that Paiva Weed feels that one of the “better explanations” she’s read regarding exemptions was an op-ed piece by Robin Fretwell Wilson, a Washington & Lee University law professor. Fretwell Wilson criticized the Rhode Island House bill for providing only “fake protections,” arguing that “religious liberty and same-sex marriage share an inseparable fate.”

Reading Fretwell Wilson’s piece one might come to the conclusion that the marriage equality legislation under consideration does nothing to protect organized religion. Fretwell Wilson completely ignores the fact that Rhode Island has a robust set of laws already on the books that provide some of the strongest religious liberty and conscience protections in the United States.

Janson Woo, and attorney with GLAD, Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, in his testimony before the Senate, explained that “Senate Bill 38 and current Rhode Island Law provide broader exemptions for religious organizations than any other state in this country that allows gay couples to marry.” How is this possible? “Current Rhode Island law already has a complete exemption for religious organizations in our sexual orientation and discrimination law.”

Woo continued, “That is an incredibly broad exemption. It is one of the broadest in our country, and even if that were not ample or broad enough for the protection of religious organizations and the protection of religious liberty, Rhode Island also has the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act, or RFRA, which provides additional protections and greater protections than the Federal Constitution [for religious freedoms].”

So why would Fretwell Wilson, who certainly seems to know a thing or two about the law, mis-characterize both the Senate bill and Rhode Island’s long standing commitment to conscience and religious freedom? Perhaps it is because she is part of the “mainstream academic presence” aligned with “Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a public interest law firm based in Washington, D.C., and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops (USCCB).”

A March, 2013 report entitled “Redefining Religious Liberty: The Covert Campaign Against Civil Rights” by Jay Michaelson for the Political Research Associates describes “A highly active, well-funded network of conservative Roman Catholic intellectuals and evangelicals” that “are waging a vigorous challenge to LGBTQ and reproductive rights by charging that both threaten their right-wing definition of “religious liberty.”

The report is comprehensive, well-sourced, and names names. It specifically identifies Robin Fretwell Wilson as being part of a “regular consortium” of scholars who “make highly conservative political arguments, send letters to state legislators, and take direct roles in the drafting of legislation. These academics may well believe that religious liberty is threatened, but their work has been enlisted by a mass movement of seeking to end access to reproductive health care and restrict the civil rights of sexual and gender minorities.” (emphasis mine)

Paiva Weed may also truly believe that she is advocating for religious liberty when she buys into the arguments of the religious right, but she is mistaken. These new calls for “religious liberty” are really calls for the right to discriminate based on gender identity and sexual preference.

In yesterday’s ProJo Bernard Healey, chief lobbyist for the Providence Catholic Diocese, regurgitated these fallacious arguments in an attempt to twist the meaning of religious liberty into its exact opposite.

Schools, health-care facilities and a hospital that are operated by the diocese and “employ thousands of people” would be subject to new rules, some of which violate the diocese’s long-held beliefs, he said. [Healey] pointed to a case in New York, which approved same-sex marriage in 2011, in which a lesbian employee of a Catholic hospital is suing for family benefits.

“If you look in the civil code of Rhode Island, how many times is marriage listed,” Healey said. “It’s not just in the marriage section, it’s in business law, it’s in rental law, it’s in employment law, it’s everywhere. … If that bill that passed in the House is put into law, we would be subject to all types of harassments, lawsuits, litigations.”

Healey makes the extraordinary claim that denying lesbian employees of Catholic hospitals family health benefits is “a long held religious belief.” Healey further claims that his right to discriminate against certain families is being threatened by the marriage equality law. Healey wants the right to open a business, and then discriminate against those his religion deems unworthy of his goods and services. In Healey’s case, this means that LGBTQ citizens need not apply, but other religions might have other ideas, and if their religion demanded different forms of discrimination, the exemptions to the law Healey demands should apply to them as well.

Judge Leon Bazile, in ruling on the Loving v. Virginia case, wrote, “Almighty God created the races white, black, yellow, malay and red, and he placed them on different continents… The fact that He separated the races shows that He did not intend for the races to mix.” Surely this is a “long held religious belief” and under Healey’s logic should be protected by law. Why should we favor Healey’s desire to discriminate over Bazile’s?

Are not both views equally obscene?

As Michaelson explains:

…there should be no mistake: the Right’s “religious liberty” campaign is a key front in the broader culture war designed to fight the same social battles on new-sounding terms, and is part of a movement with old roots in Christian Dominionism (a form of theocracy) and ties to conservative Catholics who launched the antichoice movement. Its deliberate inversion of victim-oppressor dynamic has led to limits on women’s and LGBTQ people’s real freedoms in the name of defending chimerical ones. Proponents may sincerely believe that they are defending religious freedom, but the campaign’s endgame is a “Christian nation” defined in exclusively conservative terms.

And it is thus far inadequately opposed.

On Stage Together: Carcieri, DePetro, Healey


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The inside of the Odeum Theater before it was renovated. (Photo by George Reed, courtesy of EG Patch)

What do former Governor Don Carcieri, Rev. Bernard Healey and John DePetro all have in common? The three biggest enemies of civil liberties in Rhode Island? Three people only popular on WPRO? Three people who progressives wish kept to themselves?

Even more precisely, these three pillars of Ocean State conservatism will be appearing together, on stage, Wednesday, May 8 at the Odeum Theater in the most infamously Republican town in Rhode Island, East Greenwich. (Ed. note: also RI Future headquarters) They’ll be joined by Alex and Ani CEO Giovanni “John” Feroce – who you may have known was a Republican state senator on Smith Hill from 1992 to 1994.

It’s part of the newly-renovated theater’s “mission of providing a variety of social, cultural and educational opportunities,” according to a press release sent by former Providence Journal and PBN editor Frank Prosnitz, who did not mention exactly which category this trio falls into.

It did say it was the first of a three part lecture series at the Odeum Theater for hometown boy John DePetro. Future guests will be unveiled by DePetro at a press conference today at 1 p.m. at the Odeum, 59 Main St.