By Samuel Bell in Rhode Island’s
Future - See more at: http://www.rifuture.org/thank-you-ken-block.html#sthash.TNyNJhPR.dpuf
I don’t agree with Ken Block on very
much. But I am here to thank him–for running for governor as a
Republican.
What has always bothered me about Block is that he used his “Moderate Party” label to portray his Republican views as somehow moderate.
What has always bothered me about Block is that he used his “Moderate Party” label to portray his Republican views as somehow moderate.
But then he became the leader of the
conservative group RI Taxpayers (EDITOR’S NOTE:
more commonly known as the RI Statewide Coalition), which takes more unabashedly right-wing positions
like denying rights to immigrants
denied documents.
And now he has come out as a Republican.
And now he has come out as a Republican.
The biggest problem Rhode Island
liberals have always had is that Republicans scramble ordinary politics by
running for the General Assembly as Democrats (a.k.a. DINOs).
As Ann Clanton famously put it when she was Executive Director of the Rhode Island Republican Party, “We have a lot of Democrats who we know are Republican but run as a Democrat–basically so they can win.”
As Ann Clanton famously put it when she was Executive Director of the Rhode Island Republican Party, “We have a lot of Democrats who we know are Republican but run as a Democrat–basically so they can win.”
Block could have walked this
well-tread path, a path that so many talented Rhode Island conservatives have
taken. It is the path that gave us a House Speaker and Senate President
who have each taken thousands of dollars from the NRA, passed a voter ID law, and slashed taxes for the rich more aggressively than nearly any other state.
But Block has chosen a different
route. He has chosen to be honest with the voters about his political
beliefs. I really respect him for it. I wish more conservatives would
follow his lead.
Samuel Bell - I am the Rhode Island State
Coordinator for the Progressive Democrats of America. My primary interest is
Rhode Island's economy and what we can do to fix it.