RI Progress Report: URI Profs File Suit, West Warwick, Tar Heels on Marriage Equality, Doherty and US Chamber


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URI professors have filed a lawsuit against the state saying the Board of Governors for Higher Education broke the law when they declined to ratify a contract they had already agreed to after Gov. Chafee weighed in on the matter. Profs may win in court, but in order to win in the court of public opinion they will have to make the case that the state isn’t adequately funding the state’s premier university.

Ted Nesi writes an excellent story about West Warwick’s budget problems. What he doesn’t mention is that the state cut some $6.25 million from the struggling city in the last three budget cycles.

The Projo editorial board writes that the socialists electoral victory in Europe “demonstrated that a slim majority of the French (and a larger majority of the Europeans in general) want more public spending and other actions to stimulate the economy and cut unemployment.” We’ll see if they draw the same conclusion about the United States this October.

It’ll be hard for Brendan Doherty to parse himself as a moderate when the uber-conservative U.S. Chamber of Commerce is running ads in Rhode Island on his behalf.

North Carolina voters approved a constitutional amendment that bans all forms of same sex legal relationship rights. Congrats, Tar Heel state, your intolerance is unmatched.

And in Indiana, Richard Mourdock, a Tea Party candidate who beat longtime Senate moderate Richard Lugar in a primary yesterday, said he doesn’t believe in bipartisanship.

Conservative Rep. Jon Brien says he’ll support a supplemental tax increase for Woonsocket.

If you’re surprised that Rhode Island gives away $1.6 billion in tax breaks, you haven’t been reading RI Future. We reported this yesterday.

Dem. Lawmakers Distance Themselves from ALEC


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Democratic legislators distanced themselves from involvement with ALEC, the far right wing group that acts as a stealth lobby organization to state legislators, saying they signed up because Rep. Jon Brien asked them to do so.

Many said they didn’t know much about the organization, even though it has been all over the news as of late, and that they would be taking a closer look to see if it jibes with their politics.

“I was asked to sign up,” said Rep. Peter Martin, a conservative Democrat from Newport, saying Brien asked him to join. “Now, I’m questioning why I did. I’m learning more about it and thinking I better learn a little more. I like Jon Brien but sometimes he’s a little more to the right than I am.”

Brien, a conservative Democrat, recently joined ALEC’s national board of directors. He said ALEC is actively trying to recruit more Democrats. A list of local members of the American Legislative Exchange Council indicates that more than 20 percent of the General Assembly belong to the group.

Rep. John Edwards, of Tiverton, said he didn’t join ALEC.

“Someone signed me up,” he said. “I thought it was more like the [National Conference of State Legislatures].”

The NCSL is a bipartisan group that helps state lawmakers share ideas. ALEC, on the other hand, supports only conservative ideology and is backed by corporate America. Edwards said being aligned with corporate America isn’t necessarily a bad thing, but it can be he added.

“Sometimes corporate America is aligned with my values and sometimes it isn’t, like when they are sticking it to the middle class,” he said. “I’m a moderate Democrat. I’m not one of those far-right Democrats.”

Rep. Sam Azzinaro, a conservative Democrat from Westerly, said he knew nothing about ALEC, even though he was on a list of members provided by Brien.

Rep. Lisa Baldelli-Hunt, a Woonsocket Democrat, said her membership in ALEC does not necessarily imply that she supports the group.

“If someone joins an organization, it’s not always because they are an advocate for that organization,” she said. “It might be just that they are looking for more information.”

Rep. Michael Marcello, a Scituate Democrat, echoed this sentiment, saying, “I don’t think there’s anything wrong with trying to get more information. It doesn’t mean I support 100 percent of what they do.”

In fact, Marcello distance himself from many of ALEC’s legislative priorities, saying he doesn’t support voter ID as well as other ALEC initiatives. “I didn’t join as a form of support, I joined to get more information.”

He said he and Brien attended an ALEC reception at G-Tech earlier in the year. Brien was an attorney for G-Tech from 2002 to 2007, and said he attended his first ALEC reception at G-Tech years ago when his wife was a member of the General Assembly, at the request of former Woonsocket legislator Jerry Martineau, who was convicted on corruption charges in 2009 for his cozy relationship with CVS and Blue Cross.

Brien, one of the more conservative members of the state legislature from either party, said he signed up most of the House members during the special pension session in November.

“They all thought it sounded good when they signed up,” he said. “My goal is to sign up as many new members as I can.”

Brien said the special pension session came on the heels of ALEC’s annual meeting last summer, at which he said he spent four days focusing on education reform. He described ALEC as being nonpartisan.

“I don’t find education reform to be a divisive or partisan or ideological issue,” he said. But, of course, in Rhode Island it is – and during the summer Brien almost got into a fight in an elevator with an official from the NEARI after the two exchanged words outside of a courtroom when another union official was on trial for cyberharassing an anti-union Democrat during the 2010 election season.

He said his politics are closely aligned with ALEC’s legislative agenda, but that he will not do its bidding.

“Is my goal to have ALEC have influence at the State House? No,” he said. “My goal is to bring together politically like-minded representatives and senators when we believe in the same issues and ideas. If we do that, ALEC will by osmosis have influence at the State House.”

Brien, Common Cause Spar over ALEC on Twitter


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

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

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

Proposal to Repeal Voter ID Law Discussed Today


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A bill to repeal the controversial new voter id law passed last session will be heard today by the House Judiciary Committee, said sponsor Charlene Lima, D- Cranston.

Lima said the law, which requires people to show a valid state id card before voting, “is a solution to a non-existing problem.”

“There is no widespread voter fraud with people impersonating people in Rhode Island,” she added. And because the id requirement will disenfranchise some from voting, Lima said the ill-considered law should be rescinded.

“It’s going to hurt the elderly, the disabled and minorities,” she said. “Those people that don’t tend to have an id.”

Lima also said the law will prove expensive to execute. “We need every dime we can get and we’re spending money on a solution to something that is not a problem.”

Lima said 28 of her colleagues have signed onto the bill. But, she added, “It’s probably same group of people who were against it in the first place.”

Occupy PVD to protest Pfizer, ALEC today


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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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