Ask any
conservative and they’ll tell you that the state’s problems are inextricably
linked to the dominance of Democrats. This is not untrue, but what they aren’t
telling you is that many of the Democrats in the General Assembly are more
closely aligned with their own ideology than that of the party’s typical
platform.
Our reporting on ALEC this
week brought that
rarely-mentioned truism to the center of debate this week. Not only is ALEC’s
lone Democrat on its board of directors Woonsocket’s own Jon
Brien. But for a supposedly liberal state, ALEC has no small toe
hold on our General Assembly – more than 20 percent of
legislators are members, and half of them are Democrats.
Ian Donnis, of
Rhode Island Public Radio, picked up on the theme writing, “Rhode Island might rank among the most
bluest states, but you wouldn’t know it from the General Assembly.”
By way of
example, he cites our ALEC reporting, last year’s voter ID bill (not
surprisingly, that effort was spearheaded by Brien) and the legislative
leaderships’ reluctance to embrace income tax increases as a way to get out of
debt, noting that, “Speaker Fox and Senate President Paiva Weed seem in tune
with Chamber of Commerce types.”
David
Sharfenberg of the Phoenix
compared Smith Hill legislators’
stance on tax policy to
that of their congressional counterparts, writing:
Senator
Sheldon Whitehouse got all kinds of attention for his “Buffett Rule” push,
calling on the wealthy to “pay their fair share.” Meanwhile, on Smith Hill, the
General Assembly seems all but certain to kill legislation that would raise
taxes on the rich.
It’s as good
an illustration as any of the striking gulf between state- and federal-level
politics in Rhode Island
– the former rather conservative, the latter pretty liberal.
While
Sharfenberg notes that this phenomenon is particularly acute in Woonsocket , Pawtucket and
Tiverton, I would add all of Rhode Island save
for South County
and the West Bay
to the list – though Woonsocket
is certainly ground zero for conservative Democrats.
Consider this comment posted
by Jef Nickerson, who blogs at Greater City: PVD:
“Is there a
decoder-ring for the different flavors of “Democrat” in this state,” he wrote.
“Moderate-Democrat, Conservative-Democrat, Rightwing-Democrat,
Woonsocket-Democrat.”
And similarly, a
nonpartisan State House insider, who asked not to be identified, said to me
earlier in the week, “In Woonsocket, Democrat is French for Republican.”
But while Woonsocket is the poster
child for DINO’s (Democrats in name only), it by no means lays the only claim
to a share of this market.
There’s also
Karen MacBeth, of Cumberland ,
who is sponsoring the ultrasound bill that would make it both more onerous for
women to get an abortion, and more humbling. And who can forget Rep. Peter
Palumbo, who called Jessica Ahlquist “an evil little thing” for sticking up for
the Constitution rather than religion in the case of the Cranston prayer banner.
Or how about
House Speaker Gordon Fox, who is openly gay, and didn’t fight for marriage
equality last legislative session. He’s only slightly less conservative than
Senate President Teresa Paiva-Weed, who is well known for valuing Catholics
more than constituents.
And these are
just the most vocal and recently public examples; there’s also: Doc Corvese of
North Providence, Peter Petrarca of Johnston, John Edwards of Portsmouth, Peter
Martin of Newport and, of course, Nick Mattiello of Cranston … the list goes on
and on…
Anyone who tells
you this state is controlled by the political left or organized labor may as
well be trying to sell you swampland in Florida .
It’s simply not true anymore. For evidence of as much one need look no farther
than most popular politicians in the state – Providence Mayor Angel Taveras and
Treasurer Gina Raimondo – both of
whom are most well known for taking on the unions. And in case you haven’t
noticed, it’s been years since organized labor won a meaningful battle at the State
House.
So while
conservatives scoff at the notion that there is any relationship between tax
cuts to the rich and the Rhode Island’s high unemployment rate (even though the
correlation completely undercuts the job creator myth that so many of them espouse),
it’s getting harder and harder to ignore the simple fact that as Rhode Island
moves to the right it’s economy keeps getting weaker and weaker.