Activist Abel Collins Challenges Langevin


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Abel Collins feels he hasn’t heard enough about financial reform from either U.S. Rep. James Langevin (D-R.I. 2nd District) or his prospective Republican challengers in November’s election.

The program manager for the Sierra Club’s Rhode Island chapter is unhappy enough about the situation to jump into the race himself as an independent candidate. The 2000 Brown University graduate and lifelong South Kingstown resident will officially announce his candidacy Wednesday at 3 p.m. on the south steps of the Statehouse. (In case of rain, another location will be announced. The campaign’s website is electabel2012.com.)

“It’s not about challenging Langevin,” Collins says. “It’s about challenging the two-party structure.”

Collins hopes to bring the issues of Wall Street malfeasance and campaign finance reform to the fore, which hasn’t happened yet in either of Rhode Island’s congressional campaigns.

“Both parties’ hands-off approach caused it, and the legislation they’ve enacted has done nothing,” he says. “There have been no prosecutions, and the total lack of responsiveness made me want to get involved.”

While admitting “I never stayed overnight,” Collins assisted with last year’s Occupy Providence action.

“I was one of the moderate voices,” he says.

Collins seeks greater enforcement of existing financial legislation and RICO (Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations) prosecutions for insider trading, in addition to the restoration of the Glass-Steagall Act limiting interstate banking and the promotion of community and state banks. His platform also includes promoting public financing of campaigns, green initiatives and fair trade policies.

A graduate of South Kingstown High School before majoring in political science at Brown, Collins lives in the Matunuck area with his family and credits growing up around a beach with farmland nearby for his lifelong interest in environmental issues. With the Sierra Club, he has lobbied for public transportation improvements and the encouragement of walking and bicycling in local communities.

“I tried a lot of different jobs after college,” says Collins, who worked as a letter carrier, in construction and as a poker dealer before turning to environmental activism six years ago. “With the position at the Sierra Club, I really found my home.”

He has also served as a field manager for Clean Water Action, and membership and outreach coordinator at Apeiron Institute.

Collins says his campaign’s biggest goal is to bring a voice from outside the two major parties into the political debate.

“I want to demonstrate that it’s possible to campaign as an independent using the community tools available now,” he says.

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.

With Little Proof, Gemma Claims Progressive Mantle


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Anthony Gemma

Anthony GemmaThe Democratic primary between Congressman David Cicilline and challenger Anthony Gemma will likely be decided by Providence voters and progressives. As such, it should come as no surprise that Gemma is claiming the mantle of being the more liberal candidate in the contest.

“I’m every bit as progressive and as liberal as David Cicilline,” Gemma told me on Friday. “If progressives would look under the hood, they would see I’m their guy.”

He said he supports the DREAM Act, marriage equality and even decriminalization for small amounts of marijuana. He says he’s personally opposed to abortion, but promises to never vote against a women’s right to choose. On tax policy he talks like a progressive, calling the GOP House budget “draconian” and saying he the supports the Buffett Rule, rolling back Bush era tax cuts and even keeping in place estate taxes, though all in the name of lowering the deficit rather than investing in society for its own sake.

But Gemma, a businessman who grew his family plumbing empire into a multi-million dollar a year business and also ran a marketing and communications firm, can be hard to believe at times.

He’s also promised to create 10,000 jobs for Rhode Island in five years by bringing together public and private sector leaders to build upon a business plan he drafted for the 2010 campaign and is retooling for this one – it’s long on platitudes and short on policy proposals. Almost no one thinks such a lofty goal is a realistic campaign promise coming from someone who would be a rookie congressman, but Gemma confidently asserts he can use his team-building skills to get it done.

He’s never held public office, so he’s got no track record. And furthermore, he only registered as a Democrat a few short months before announcing his candidacy in 2010, and didn’t vote in the 2008 primary. He once donated to the campaign of conservative Republican Don Carcieri.

“I gave him a donation because I was running a business and he was definitely the pro-business candidate,” he said of Carcieri, though he said he didn’t vote for him and has never voted for a Republican.

Gemma said he supports organized labor “when unions support Rhode Island,” but again, his track record is at best, tarnished. Gem Plumbing was cited for 32 labor violations, which was “later reduced to six over the objection of the chief inspector,” according to the Associated Press, for hiring non-union plumbers when he was president of the company.

“I don’t recall exactly what happened because it was such a long time ago,” he said. “Our company was growing so fast at the time we my have made some mistakes along the way.”

Even his social networking success is suspect, a case RI Future first made in this piece: Gemma’s Suspicious Facebook Followers. He’s got more than 900,000 followers on Twitter and more than 100,000 friends on Facebook. But ask him how he amassed such a following, and he’s not talking.

“Strategically, there are ways in which to deal with social networking that I would like to write a book about,” he said. But added, “I choose not to talk about strategy during the campaign.”

He did say that it’s “certainly possible” that some of his Facebook and Twitter followers are not real people but said he has “never done the research to know how many are real and how many are fake.” When I asked if he paid for automated follows and Facebook friends he said, “Again, I’m not going to about strategy.”

So we’ll have to wait for the book to find out how he got more than 40,000 Facebook likes in one day, or why he has so many followers from Germany, Spain, Indonesia, and Dubai.

It’s not unlike how he invited reporters to a Sunday evening availability then declined to answer questions from them. Gemma seems to enjoy controlling the message, and one has to wonder if he’s doing that with his new-found fervor for progressive policy positions as well.

Whitehouse Says Buffett Rule Will Be Back


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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse has said all along that it would likely take several votes before Democrats could break the hold that Wall Street special interests hold over their republican counterparts and such seems like the fate for the Buffet Rule, which was successfully filibustered Monday on its first vote on the Senate floor.

“I’ll keep fighting to make the Buffett Rule law,” he said in a statement issued yesterday afternoon. “Although we were unable to break the Republican filibuster, a majority of the United States Senate has gone on the record in favor of greater fairness in our tax code.”

Here’s a video of Whitehouse speaking on the Senate floor yesterday:

Prior to the vote, Whitehouse had made a practice of mentioning that oftentimes legislation that would hurt Wall Street special interests needs to come back to the floor several times before Republican Senators will do right by the American people instead of corporate campaign backers.

“We tried to go to the Wall Street reform bill in the Senate and Republicans filibustered it,” Whitehouse told me recently. Majority Leader “Harry [Reid] found a way to call it up again and we lost again. Then Harry figured out a way to call it up again and we lost again. It was either fourth or fifth time it was scheduled for a vote, and we were going to stay up all night to bring attention to this, and at that point the minority leader came in to our leader, Harry Reid, and said, ‘I give up. My guys are getting killed, they are getting phone calls at home. We’re throwing in the towel, you can go to this bill.’ And that was a really clear sign that you can have special interest obstruction that can stop progress on a bill not once, not twice but four times and still in end prevail.”

The Buffett Rule needed 60 votes to break the Republican filibuster and received only 51. Sen. Mark Pryor was the only Democrat to vote against the proposal and Sen. Susan Collins of Maine was the only Republican to vote for it.

Whitehouse’s Buffett Rule Up for Senate Vote Today


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Sen Whitehouse at a recent rally for the Buffett Rule. (Photo courtesy of Whitehouse office)

After a solid week of Democrats making Sheldon Whitehouse’s Buffett Rule bill the biggest legislative priority in the country, the Senate today will take up the proposal. Seems as if the efforts may pay off as a new Gallup Poll shows that 60 percent of Americans support it.

Today’s vote is a motion to proceed and needs to pass with a 60 vote super majority in order to move to a vote on the bill itself. In other words, Democrats will have to convince at least seven Republicans to vote to allow the bill to come up for a floor vote. That is expected to happen sometime around 5 and 7 p.m. The Senate is scheduled to take up the matter at 2 p.m. Here’s the video from Whitehouse’s floor speech today:

In the meantime, we’ve included a Twitter widget below so you can follow along with what Washington DC and beyond are saying about the Buffett Rule and here are some useful links for catching up to speed:

Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s op/ed in RI Future on the Buffett Bill. Here’s another op/ed he wrote for the Projo a few days later.

Whitehouse tell me that Wall Street lobbyists will be biggest hurdle to passage. Congressman Cicilline also supports the Buffett Rule. Whitehouse talks about the Buffett Rule with the Center for American Progress.

The Times has a great overview page on the Buffett Rule, with an archive of their coverage. And here’s a link to the President’s weekly address in which he again advocates for it.

See Gemma Run


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Anthony Gemma

 

Anthony GemmaDark clouds hung over Providence’s Prospect Terrace Park as businessman Anthony Gemma, lately of Mediapeel, said, in a roughly 15 minute speech, that he would bring “change” and “new ideas,” while redefining what service meant for the office of U.S. Congressman.

While the congressional hopeful spoke, supporters looked on, and a quartet picnicked despite the light sprinkling of rain. Cupcakes and cookies were laid out for the decently sized crowd.

Mr. Gemma attempted to put his candidacy in the paradigm of former Democratic Party presidents like Franklin Delano Roosevelt and John Fitzgerald Kennedy, whose New Deal and New Frontier programs, respectively, remain major touchstones of the Democratic Party.

Thus Mr. Gemma introduced that his candidacy would run under the theme of the “New Idea”. However, he did not once say what that New Idea would be, leaving the door open to speculation.

Mr. Gemma also said that there was a very real chance that the Democrats could win back control of the House of Representatives this election, and that it might be as close as one seat. He said that he had the best chance of defeating Republican nominee Brendan Doherty in November, though polls show him in a poor position against Doherty, with a large portion of the electorate undecided.

In a speech that was big on sweeping abstractions like “vision,” “courage,” and “confidence,” Mr. Gemma mentioned only that he had a jobs plan, not what was in it. No single concrete policy was announced, only that they would be rolled out over the course of the campaign. He claimed he shared the same anxiety and anger as many voters in the 1st Congressional District.

Anger was a major theme of the speech, as Mr. Gemma attacked Mr. Doherty for having “zero understanding” of how to create jobs. Claiming that Mr. Doherty was a creature of the public sector, Mr. Gemma said that he alone of the candidates for the office of U.S. Congressman understood how to create jobs. But as for his opponent in the primary season, incumbent Congressman David Cicilline, Mr. Gemma never once deigned to mention him by name, instead making a veiled reference to Mr. Cicilline’s recent apologies by saying “I won’t have to apologize to you for lying so that I can win your vote.”

He never once made clear how he intended to take on Mr. Cicilline, who has the support of the Governor, the Treasurer, the current Mayor of Providence, the rest of Rhode Island’s congressional delegation, and a massive advantage in funding. Perhaps though, the cross-section of politicians Mr. Gemma rallied to his conference offers some insight. Mr. Gemma thanked Providence councilmen Davian Sanchez, Wilbur Jennings, and Nick Narducci for attending, along with former mayors John Lombardi of Providence and said that Charles Lombardi of North Providence had not yet arrived.

Upon finishing his speech, Mr. Gemma made a beeline towards the park’s exit, working only the part of the crowd that stood between him and the street, as the press tagged along. He then climbed into a waiting GMC sports utility vehicle and drove away, prompting one supporter to exclaim that the press had chased him away from his own press conference.

The Buffett Rule: Your Straight Deal on Taxes


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Back in 1985, President Ronald Reagan said: “We’re going to close the unproductive tax loopholes that have allowed some of the truly wealthy to avoid paying their fair share.”

Almost three decades later, we’re still hearing about ultra-high income earners like Warren Buffett paying a lower tax rate than his secretary.

According to the IRS, the wealthiest 400 Americans, who earned an average of roughly $270 million in 2008, paid an average tax rate of just 18.2 percent that year. That’s about the same rate paid by a single truck driver in Rhode Island. It’s not right, and we need to restore fairness to our tax code.

And next week, we have a key opportunity to do just that. The U.S. Senate has scheduled a vote on the eve of tax day, April 16, on the Paying a Fair Share Act, legislation I introduced to require multi-million-dollar earners to pay a minimum federal tax rate of 30 percent.

Implementing the so-called “Buffett Rule” would restore some badly needed fairness to our tax system. It would also generate an estimated $47 billion in new revenue that could help reduce our federal deficit or repair decaying infrastructure. President Obama has already thrown his weight behind the bill, urging the Senate to pass the Paying a Fair Share Act — but the GOP has made it clear that they want to safeguard tax loopholes for the ultra-wealthy.

You can lend your voice to this important fight by becoming a citizen cosponsor of the Buffett Rule at www.BuffettRuleBill.com.

This would be a real win-win for middle-class families at a time when so many Americans are fed up with a system that gives special deals to the wealthy and well connected. Polls have shown that Americans across the country strongly support the Buffett Rule. And the Rhode Islanders I’ve heard from say the same thing: They’re feeling more and more squeezed by this economy, but they pay their fair share in taxes, and they expect millionaires and billionaires to do the same.

We need to act now to correct this inequity and show the American people that we are on their side. This is a test of Congress to show that we can give them a straight deal, not just help special interests.

I’m not saying this will be easy — the reality is that this will be a tough fight. But you know what? It’s the right thing to do, and we should keep at it for as long as it takes.

We know the special interests that fought for unfair tax loopholes will fight against the Buffett Rule, and you can bet that they will continue to urge Republicans to oppose our efforts to restore fairness.

That’s where you come in. As we get closer to our vote on April 16, we need to demonstrate that there is a groundswell of support to turn the Buffett Rule into law — and your voice can be part of that groundswell.

Please become a citizen cosponsor of the Paying a Fair Share Act, then call your senators and tell your friends to do the same.

If the American people make their voices heard and put enough pressure on Congress, we can restore fairness in our economic system, do what’s right for the middle class, and show that Congress can stand up to special interests.

I hope you’ll join me in this fight. It’s one worth fighting.

This post originally appeared in the Huffington Post.

Wall St. Will Fight Buffett Rule, Whitehouse Says


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Wall Street lobbyists and associated special interest groups will be the biggest obstacle to passage of the Buffett Rule bill when the Senate takes it up in one week, said the legislation’s prime sponsor, Rhode Island Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse.

“I think Wall Street is going to be in on this with all of its energy,” Whitehouse told me last week. “I think the Wall Street special interests are going to be the strongest [opposition] group on this.”

That’s because his bill, known more formally as the Paying A Fair Share Act, would hit investment bankers and hedge fund managers disproportionately hard. The bill would tax all income earned over $1 million, including capital gains and stock dividends, which is currently taxed at a lower rate. Hence why Warren Buffett pays a lower tax rate than his secretary – because more of his income is on capital gains and stock dividends.

“The bulk of the really big money like this is made in the financial sector,” Whitehouse said.

While Whitehouse expects Senate Republicans to initially align themselves with Wall Street, he said he thinks Democrats can pick up at least a few GOP supporters if the American people get behind the bill.

“The magic of democracy is that even when people are beholden to special interests,” he said, “when they start to hear from their constituents that they expect them to vote a certain way on something and they don’t understand why they are not, they can dump their special interests in a hurry and suddenly be voting the right way.”

There’s even recent historical precedent for such. He recalled when the Senate was slated to vote on Wall Street reform.

“We tried to go to the Wall Street reform bill in the Senate and Republicans filibustered it,” Whitehouse told me. Majority Leader “Harry [Reid] found a way to call it up again and we lost again. Then Harry figured out a way to call it up again and we lost again.

“It was either fourth or fifth time it was scheduled for a vote, and we were going to stay up all night to bring attention to this, and at that point the minority leader came in to our leader, Harry Reid, and said, ‘I give up. My guys are getting killed, they are getting phone calls at home. We’re throwing in the towel, you can go to this bill.’ And that was a really clear sign that you can have special interest obstruction that can stop progress on a bill not once, not twice but four times and still in end prevail.”

Even if that happens, however, the bill isn’t expected to pass in the GOP-controlled House. But Whitehouse said debating the bill’s merits now has value in that it will put the issue squarely on the nation’s radar for when the Bush tax cuts expire at the end of the year when Congress is expected to do a major overhaul of the tax code.

Sen. Jack Reed is a cosponsor of the bill, and Congressman David Cicilline recently called on Speaker John Boehner to pass the bill in the House. The legislation is estimated to shave $50 billion from the national deficit over the next ten years.

Cicilline Calls for House Passage of Buffett Rule Bill


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Congressman David Cicilline has joined the Buffett Rule movement, calling on Speaker John Boehner to pass the House version of Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s Paying A Fair Share Legislation.

“Under current tax laws, working men and women may be asked to pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes than wealthy individuals, many of whom derive a significant portion of their earnings from capital gains,” Cicilline wrote to Boehner. “Although there are many issues on which we may disagree, surely both Republicans and Democrats must acknowledge that there is something wrong with a system that asks a Fortune 500 CEO to pay a lower tax rate than his or her secretary.”

The House version of the bill is being sponsored by Rep. Tammy Baldwin, D- Wisconsin. In a conference call yesterday with Sens. Whitehouse and Chuck Schumer, D-NY, she said her constituents believe “our tax system rigged against middle class families and quite frankly it is.”

The Senate is expected to vote on the bill April 16. Yesterday on the conference call Schumer and Whitehouse said Democrats hope to pick up a few Republican votes. No date has been set yet for a House vote on the bill, where its chances of passing are less optimistic.
Here’s the full text of Cicilline’s letter to Boehner:

Dear Speaker Boehner,
For much of the past year, public attention has been focused on the issues that divide us as Democrats and Republicans as well as the partisan tactics and extreme rhetoric that has been used in pursuit of conflicting priorities. But at a time when our economic recovery is still struggling to take hold, and with my home state of Rhode Island now experiencing the second highest unemployment rate in the country, working families want to see Washington put aside partisan rhetoric in favor of pragmatic solutions to the challenges we face.

One of the most urgent areas of concern lies in reforming our tax structure. As you know, under current tax laws, working men and women may be asked to pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes than wealthy individuals, many of whom derive a significant portion of their earnings from capital gains. Although there are many issues on which we may disagree, surely both Republicans and Democrats must acknowledge that there is something wrong with a system that asks a Fortune 500 CEO to pay a lower tax rate than his or her secretary.

Last week, President Barack Obama reiterated his call for Congress to institute the “Buffett Rule.” My fellow Rhode Islander, Senator Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI), has introduced legislation in the U.S. Senate, that would ensure multi-million dollar earners pay at least 30% of their income in taxes, which would ensure parity with taxes imposed on middle class families.    The Senate has scheduled a vote on this legislation, the Paying a Fair Share Act, S. 2230, for April 161h.    As you know, Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) has introduced the House companion to Senator Whitehouse’s bill, H.R. 3903, which I have cosponsored.

As millions ofmiddle class Americans struggle to make ends meet, and with the President calling on Congress to act, I believe we must put aside partisan differences and do the right thing for our country by considering this commonsense proposal. I strongly urge you to take all necessary action to ensure that legislation instituting a “Buffett Rule” is brought to a vote when the U.S. House of Representatives returns to session.

I thank you in advance for your consideration and look forward to your response.

RI Senators Advocate for Middle Class


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Both of Rhode Island’s senators will be here in the Ocean State today and advocating for bills that would benefit the middle class. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, as we reported on Saturday, will be in Cranston for a roundtable discussion on his Buffett Rule bill. And Sen. Jack Reed will be at URI, with school president David Dooley to talk about his bill that would prevent the interest rate on some student loans from doubling in July.

“It is in our national interest to try and keep student loan rates low,” said Reed in a statement about his bill that would prevent the interest rate on Stafford loans from doubling. “As the price of college continues to increase, more students are forced to take out bigger loans to pay for their education.”

Reed’s office said the interest rate on Stafford Loans is slated to double in July, from 3.4 to 6.8 percent. According to the release, 7.8 million low- and middle-income students across the country utilize Stafford loans, 36,000 of whom are from Rhode Island. There are 8,000 URI students who utilize Staford loans.

Sen. Whitehouse will be at the Comprehensive Community Action Program’s headquarters (311 Doric Ave, Cranston) to discuss his Buffett Rule bill that would, according to his staff, “ensure that multi-million-dollar earners pay at least a 30 percent effective tax rate.”

Obama Plugs Whitehouse’s ‘Buffett Rule’ Bill


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Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse’s “Buffett Rule” bill got a big boost today as President Obama, long a fan of the proposal, focused his weekly address on the legislation that would prevent millionaires from shielding their earnings from income taxes.

“Now, some people call this class warfare,” Obama said. “But I think asking a billionaire to pay at least the same tax rate as his secretary is just common sense.  We don’t envy success in this country.  We aspire to it.  But we also believe that anyone who does well for themselves should do their fair share in return, so that more people have the opportunity to get ahead – not just a few.

“So every Member of Congress is going to go on record.  And if they vote to keep giving tax breaks to people like me – tax breaks our country can’t afford – then they’re going to have to explain to you where that money comes from.”

Here’s the , and here’s the video:

The Senate is slated to vote on, or at least talk about, the Buffett Rule on April 16, symbolically the day before income tax filings are due. Sen. Jack Reed, and 12 others, have signed onto the bill.

Also called the Paying your Fair Share Act, Whitehouse’s office said it will: “ensure that multi-million-dollar earners pay at least a 30 percent effective tax rate.  It would apply only to taxpayers with income over $1 million – including capital gains and dividends.  Taxpayers earning over $2 million would be subject to a 30% minimum federal tax rate.  The tax would be phased in for incomes between $1 million and $2 million, with those taxpayers paying a portion of the extra tax required to get them to a 30% effective tax rate,” according to a recent release from Senator Whitehouse’s office.

Here’s what Whitehouse told me about it when we spoke at a recent community supper in East Greenwich:

Whitehouse will be hosting a roundtable discussion on the Buffett Rule in Cranston on Tuesday. He’ll be joined by “CCAP Executive Director Joanne McGunagle and Rhode Islanders from Cranston, Providence, and Woonsocket,” according to a release. “at the Comprehensive Community Action Program’s (CCAP) headquarters in Cranston.”

The Chafee Endorsement Matters For Cicilline


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Governor Lincoln Chafee (Independent)

The big political news of the yesterday was Governor Lincoln Chafee’s endorsement of U.S. Representative David Cicilline for Congress in 2012. First, Chris Fierro of Mr. Cicilline’s office tweeted last night that Gov. Chafee attended a fundraiser for the incumbent representative.  Then the Governor’s office confirmed as much in this statement.

There’s a danger of reading too much into this, but it appears to be a good sign for both Mr. Cicilline and Gov. Chafee. It definitely hurts the campaign of Mr. Cicilline’s challenger Brendan Doherty, who could’ve bolstered his argument of being an acceptable Republican for Rhode Island by winning Gov. Chafee’s endorsement, Rhode Island’s last federal delegation Republican (it’s unlikely Mr. Doherty ever sought the Governor’s endorsement). But with no non-Democratic statewide officeholders left to endorse him, Mr. Doherty will have to rely on obscure RIGOP apparatchiks, conservative media, and the nationally-despised national Republican Party.

Mr. Cicilline won’t be overly-bolstered by this endorsement. As Mr. Nesi points out, the Governor and the Congressman are the two most disliked politicians in Rhode Island right now (of those politicians included on polls). If this was two years ago, such an endorsement might’ve shored up Mr. Cicilline’s progressive supporters, which it will somewhat help to do now. But Governor Chafee is not the same as Candidate Chafee, and his low poll numbers are likely due to a collapse in support from the labor-progressive coalition that propelled him into office in 2010. It does mean that potential Democratic primary opponent Anthony Gemma is increasingly isolated in Rhode Island’s political landscape.

I think Gov. Chafee actually benefits the most from this endorsement. There’s no doubt that the Governor has been pulling reliable duty as a Democratic Party workhorse; co-chairing President Barack Obama’s re-election committee, endorsing Senator Sheldon Whitehouse who ousted him from office, appearing with Providence mayor Angel Taveras, and now this. If the Governor makes the switch from Independent to Democrat, he might might be able to get more cooperation from the General Assembly in time for 2014, perhaps preside over a few legislative successes and stay in the limelight by virtue of party affiliation.

His fortunes are tied to those of the state’s of course, and Democrats might prefer that the Governor remains apart; setting up what could be an easy pick-up for current Treasurer Gina Raimondo without the risk of an unpopular candidate harming any down-ticket party members.

Cicilline Comes Out Strong Against GOP Budget Bill


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On the Huffington Post and on the House floor, Congressman David Cicilline has come out strong against the House GOP budget proposal.

Today, after voting against it yesterday, he penned an op/ed for the Huffington Post today critical of the bill writing, “less than a year after a similar proposal was defeated, the House Republican leadership held a vote on a budget proposal that would extend tax cuts for the wealthiest Americans, make deep cuts to programs that serve middle class families and end the Medicare guarantee for our seniors.”

Cicilline spoke out against the bill earlier in the week saying, “My home state of Rhode Island has one of the highest unemployment rates in the country. My constituents need common-sense solutions that will create jobs and get our country back on the right track not another extreme proposal from the House Republican leadership.”

He said the bill would give the richest Americans an average tax break of $150,000 a year.

The top-down budget proposal passed the Republican-controlled House largely along party lines. Politco said of the bill:

“Just 10 Republicans defected, and the 228-191 vote gives the embattled GOP leadership what it most wanted: a show of party unity behind a bold election-year vision that includes new private options for Medicare and a simplified Tax Code. But the price paid by Congress will be big: wrecking havoc with hard-fought bargains under the Budget Control Act and inviting another shutdown fight with Senate Democrats and Obama unless the House again reverses course.”

Whitehouse Intros Super PAC DISCLOSE Bill


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RI Future first reported this story Monday morning, but we thought you might want to know that it has now actually happened. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse introduced the DISCLOSE Act, which would require Super PACs and other anonymous political donors to stand by their TV ads by requiring that they put their names on them.

“The American people deserve to know who is really behind these ads,” said Whitehouse, according to a press release from his office.  “This legislation will require organizations involved in elections to tell the public where they are getting their money, and what they are spending it on – shining a badly needed light into the activities of these groups.”

Here are more quotes from some of Whitehouse’s 34 co-sponsoring senators:

“In the age of super PACs, it is more important than ever for citizens to understand who is financing political campaigns and negative attack ads. Voters must be able to make informed decisions, and this legislation provides rules that will prevent this unregulated influx of money from compromising the transparency of our electoral process.”
– Senator Jeanne Shaheen, D-New Hampshire

“Republicans and Democrats have both touted disclosure in the past and the ideas in this bill have earned broad support. There’s a lot we need to fix with campaign finance, but at a minimum, the American people at least deserve to know where the deluge of money financing these new shadow campaign operations is coming from.”
– Senator Tom Udall, D-New Mexico

“Citizens United unleashed a wave of corporate campaign cash that threatens to drown out the voice of the people.  This is a serious threat to our democracy and we cannot stand by while it happens.”
– Senator Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon

“We believe that all of the unlimited cash allowed by the Citizens United decision must at least be disclosed.”  “This legislation seeks to limit the damage of the Supreme Court decision that has given corporations and the very wealthy unprecedented sway over our elections, and represents one of the most serious threats to the future of our democracy.”
– Senator Charles E. Schumer, D-New York

Senator Whitehouse explains the Buffett Rule


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Senator Sheldon Whitehouse, sponsor the so-called Buffett Rule, sat down with the Center for American Progress to discuss his bill for a mandatory income tax rate of 30 percent for millionaires.

“Regular folks,” he said, think politics has become rigged to favor the richest Americans “and that’s a bad framework for people to be looking at this United States government from. Unfortunately in a lot of ways, it’s a very accurate framework, and the tax code is one of the ways to prove that is really the case right now.”

The substantial change to the tax code, he said, would be that capital gains would be taxed just like any other kind of income for those who make more than a million dollars in a year. So a CEO who gets paid in stock options, would still have to pay taxes on that if they earned more than a million.

He said the proposal could come up for a vote “in the three or four  months on either side of the New Year” when Democrats will could be negotiating from a position of strength because of the expiration of the Bush tax cuts. Right now, he said, the bill isn’t likely to get substantial floor time, unless the American people demand it.

Prompted by a question at the very end of the discussion, Whitehouse, who it turns out was once considered a candidate for the Supreme Court, threw a jab at the Citizens United decision: “Corporations are not people. I think the decision claiming that they were will go down in history as one of most grievous errors of the Supreme Court.”

Interestingly, Ted Nesi reports this morning that National Journal recently ranked Whitehouse as the 19th most liberal senator after two consecutive years of being ranked as the most liberal.

Congress Needs to Start Working to Put the American People Back to Work


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When I decided to run for Congress in 2010, I began my campaign with the conviction that no issue was more important than putting men and women across Rhode Island back to work.

For too long, national policies had left behind far too many working families in our state. In cities such as Woonsocket, factory employees who worked hard their whole lives were left to fend for themselves because of tax incentives for corporations to ship jobs overseas. Students at schools such as Rhode Island College were anxious that they wouldn’t be able to find work even after they earned their degrees. And small-business owners from Smithfield to Newport were still unable to get access to the capital they needed to support their companies.

Of course, Rhode Islanders certainly weren’t alone in their frustration — the same sentiments were held by men and women across our country. But as I begin the second year of my first term in Congress, I am struck by how little progress has been made to put our country back on the right track.

Since assuming the majority last year, the House Republican leadership has repeatedly missed opportunities to get things done and instead  has focused on extreme legislation with little or no chance of passing in the Senate. Making an ideological point has trumped getting things done. Several times during the past year, Republican leaders pushed our country to the brink — bowing to tea party pressure to resist any compromise even as unemployment remained high and Congressional approval plunged to record lows.

But following public rejection of their most recent effort to end a middle-class tax cut and unemployment benefits, I hope that my Republican colleagues will recognize that the time has come to get back to work and take real steps to strengthen our economy and get Americans back to work.

There are several bills pending before House committees that would immediately benefit our economy, and the underlying goals of these bills enjoy bipartisan support.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro’s (D-Conn.) National Infrastructure Development Bank Act would help leverage public and private funding for infrastructure projects — creating jobs and enabling us to rebuild crumbling bridges and roads across our country. Rep. Dan Lipinski’s (D-Ill.) National Manufacturing Strategy Act would direct the president to establish a manufacturing strategy for our country. Rep.Heath Shuler’s (D-N.C.) tax legislation would make the research and development tax credit permanent, encouraging small-business owners to propose and commercialize innovative ideas.

Earlier this year, I introduced the Make It in America Block Grant Program Act, a bill that has garnered 37 House co-sponsors, and a companion bill was introduced by Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.). This legislation would make investments, administered through the Commerce Department, to help small and medium-sized manufacturers retool their factories, retrain workers and acquire the capital they need to compete. American manufacturing helped push our country ahead in the 20th century, and making it a national priority again is key to revitalizing our economy.

I return to Washington, D.C., even more mindful of the urgency of taking action to improve our nation’s economy and the lives of those I have the honor of representing and more aware of the obstacles that continue to impede progress for everyday Americans.

A willingness to cross party lines and put pragmatism ahead of partisanship has been missing for far too long in Washington. But with millions of our friends, family members and neighbors still out of work, it has never been more important for Congress to get to work so that Americans can get back to work. We can’t wait.

Rep. David Cicilline is a member of the Small Business and the Foreign Affairs committees.

Originally published in Roll Call.

Ignore POTUS: It’s the McGuffin

Mitt, creating jobs

While I, like all of you political junkies, am practically main-lining the GOP Presidential primaries, they bring to mind a basic criticism I’ve had of almost every “outsider” political movement: they foolishly focus on electing a President. But that really doesn’t matter. It’s the McGuffin.

While so many on the left have expressed outrage at Obama’s ineffectiveness, I for one did not expect all that much to begin with. A cursory skimming of the Constitution makes it clear: the power in this government rests with Congress.

And with the last, oh, 15 Congresses, more’s the pity.

So I have to ask: why are we so fixated on the President if that office doesn’t really have that much power and, more importantly, why _aren’t_ we fixated on Congress? The answer, of course, is that the Congress is complicated and the President…well, there’s only the one. It’s so much easier to rally behind a President but completely useless. It’s the McGuffin.

What is a McGuffin?

The Wikipedia page at the link above includes Alfred Hitchcock’s famous explanation of a McGuffin:

It might be a Scottish name, taken from a story about two men in a train. One man says “What’s that package up there in the baggage rack?”, and the other answers “Oh, that’s a McGuffin”. The first one asks “What’s a McGuffin?”. “Well”, the other man says, “It’s an apparatus for trapping lions in the Scottish Highlands”. The first man says “But there are no lions in the Scottish Highlands”, and the other one answers “Well, then that’s no McGuffin!”. So you see, a McGuffin is nothing at all.

The McGuffin is a plot device designed to distract the audience so that the more important aspects of the thriller come as a complete surprise. The McGuffin dominates the first act, but is completely forgotten by the last. Psycho starts out as a movie about a woman who embezzles a large sum of money from the law firm where she works. But is that what the film is really about? The embezzlement is the McGuffin.

So when it comes to implementing the crucial changes that will make this nation better for all of us, our fixation with electing a sympathetic President only prevents us from getting the job done. Congress made this mess; Congress can fix this mess. The President is the McGuffin.

Who is the “Hitchcock”?

Any good detective knows where to start when trying to unravel a mystery: look for the person or persons who benefit the most from the crime. In this case, it’s obvious that “big business”, particularly those businesses that suckle at the federal teat, benefit from a Congress that has largely abdicated its responsibilities and prerogatives.

Is it any coincidence that the US military/intelligence apparatus now circles the globe with “hot” wars in two one nations and covert ops in dozens of others while Congress has basically given up its Constitutional duty for oversight while simultaneously doling out billions annually in “defense contracts”? Congress has not declared war since 1943, yet the military/intelligence apparatus gets more business every year.

Congress pays for the US military to hire mercenaries and out-source torture! Do you really need any more proof?

These are only the most egregious examples. Look into any industry, any area for which Congress has authority and you’ll find a similar scenario — the good of the nation and the goals of virtually all more-or-less normal people come in a distant second to the venal wants of those who own pay for the campaigns of Congresspeople.

Thus the “Hitchcock” here, the director that distracts us so masterfully, is these money interests — amoral non-humans (or worse, amoral humans) that have become absurdly wealthy through the largesse of a long series of Congresses that serve their interests and their interests alone. My film-oriented metaphor is not random; the major media are high on the list of those who benefit from a store-bought Congress and thus high on the list of villains in this drama.

Occupy the Second Act

Like all McGuffins, the meaninglessness of electing a sympathetic President will eventually become known, and this nation will wake up to its responsibilities. Indeed, this is happening already, and no force today is more meaningful to this cause than Occupy. Occupy does all the things necessary to put this into action except run for Congress.

First, Occupy is national at a minimum. Ultimately, this is a global movement, but let’s just focus with what’s on our plates right now. Occupy serves to bring the same basic message of solidarity and direct action to every city of meaningful size as well as towns and hamlets in the most remote areas. Everywhere it goes, it brings a message of civic and political activism. This is the only way for the progressive movement to develop the national groundswell necessary to become a force in Congress.

Second, Occupy breaks through the major media narratives about who we on the left are. I’m not a child. I don’t live in my parents’ basement. In fact, I’m a “job creator”; when I succeed, people in the Blackstone Valley get manufacturing jobs. Occupy Youngstown (OH) is dominated by senior citizens. By forcing itself into the national consciousness, Occupy shows how diverse, intelligent, active, articulate and, above all, how capable we are. We are not to be scorned; we are not to be feared. We are admirable. We are the future.

Third, Occupy jump-starts the national discussion about the truly important issues, and it shows as trivial the issues that The Director wants to keep front and center. Poor people are not millionaires that failed; homelessness is not a function of laziness. In fact, the current severity of both of these issues is a direct result of national policies instituted by Congresses over the past 30 years or more. As long as Occupy can hold itself together, these narratives will become harder and harder to ignore.

Finally, by using the tried-and-true approach of provocative, non-violent direct action, Occupy forces the villains to show their hands. From nonchalant, pepper-spraying UC Davis cops to obsequiously pandering so-called “liberals”, street-level action forces those in authority to prove out their credentials. And, as the Occupiers like to remind us all: The Whole World is Watching. For any more-or-less normal human, it’s obvious which side they’re on.

Act 3: TBD

I don’t doubt for a minute that The Director will develop a counter-attack, a reassertion of the McGuffin. (Wait, did Mitt Romney just do something foolish? Oh, that’s awesome!) Sorry…what was I saying?

If we really want to see change happen, we need to double-down on our program. And it needs to be local first, state second, Congress third and the McGuffin.

At this point, we can quibble around the edges. Does city councilor X need to be replaced, or can he or she find the guts to vote rightly? Is Congressperson Y really in the pocket of the donors, or can a strong, left wing primary candidate make the message clear. (You _know_ what I mean, guest writer, when I say: Apparently NOT!)

RI Future’s own Libby Kimzey is running for RI House 8 against a known villain who takes semi-legal means to destroy historic structures that his own district is trying to preserve (and who drives his preposterous pickup truck like a positive ass-hat). With luck, others will announce against Gordon (H71) and Ottiano (S11). And those are just the ones that come to mind.

The election season is just getting going, and we have more questions than we have answers. But this much is clear — the time to move is now. Progressives have more openings, more opportunity than I’ve ever seen in my political memory. And I remember Nixon vs. McGovern.

Get up. Get out. Get moving.

Somebody asked me recently: How can I vote Progressive for my GA members? I told him, “I’m not sure, but the Progressive candidate in your district might just be you.”


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