Seth
Magaziner surge in the polls against Frank Caprio hardly a surprise
President Bill Clinton's August 27 visit to Providence to endorse and support Seth Magaziner gives Frank Caprio the chance to tell a second US President to take his endorsement and "shove it!" |
By
Will Collette
The
clock is ticking down rapidly to the September 9 primary where Democrats will
have to choose between Seth Magaziner
and Frank Caprio as the Democratic candidate for General Treasurer.
Polling
shows Seth’s public support has jetted ahead to take a 12 point lead over Frank
Caprio in the final days. This is a huge shift from the 18
point lead Caprio held over Magaziner in June – a 30-point swing!
It’s
pretty easy to understand why this surge happened. One factor was the decision
by the third contender, Ernie
Almonte, to run not as a Democrat, but rather as an independent with the
Republican Party’s tacit endorsement. That was probably a wise move for Almonte,
after
video emerged showing him promoting right-wing views on issues like Social
Security, Medicare and tax cuts for the rich.
It
looks like Magaziner picked up all of Almonte’s supporters and then some. Frank
Caprio is stuck with his core constituency of very conservative Democrats and
party regulars loyal to his father, Judge Frank Caprio.
It
also didn’t help Caprio for his brother David, a former South Kingstown state
Representative, to be revealed as a player and partner with Rep. Peter Palumbo
in a sleazy deal to get the state’s big beach concession contract. In what
looks like blatant bid-rigging, David Caprio filed the second best bid behind
Rep. Palumbo to run the concessions at state beaches.
David Caprio (L) and his competitor and now partner, state Rep Peter Palumbo in the beach concession scandal |
Once
Palumbo won the bid, he withdrew, so the state awarded the contract to David
Caprio. Then, Caprio hires Palumbo to actually perform
the contract, but at a loss of $250,000 to the taxpayers.
The
State
Police are investigating and the state Ethics
Commission is going after Rep. Palumbo because, as a state legislator, he
is forbidden from bidding for or
carrying out state contracts.
David
Caprio, for his part, resigned
as Democratic State Party Chair. He has apparently not resigned from the RI
Judiciary Disciplinary Board where he oversees the conduct of all Rhode
Island lawyers, including his father and his brother Frank.
As
a Democratic State Committee member over the past several election cycles, I
saw David Caprio’s only “achievement” as state party chair was to grease the
wheels and whip the vote to get the state party to endorse his brother Frank.
Other
than that, David Caprio was practically invisible. Statements by Republicans,
no matter how outrageous, remained unanswered. Former state party chair Ed
Pacheco had us spoiled – he never let the GOP get away with attacking Democrats
without a fast and furious response.
The
excuse given for David Caprio’s very rare appearances was that he was too busy
doing party fund-raising. At least that was the excuse when party members would
ask why they never saw him around.
However, the campaign finance reports filed
by the state party show that Caprio raised virtually no money. The party’s
primary sources of funds were contributions of $3500 from most of the
candidates for state office. The party reports show that even with a depleted
staff, they were running close to the bone.
I wonder what party Caprio will join after Democratic voters kick him to the curb again |
This
unseemliness was enough to shake the faith of even the most loyal party
regulars, questioning where the Caprio family was leading them this time.
Lacking
any message other than “give me another chance to screw up as State Treasurer,”
Frank Caprio has rolled out negative TV ads challenging Seth Magaziner’s résumé.
Aside from being twisted beyond recognition, as
Magaziner’s former boss made clear, Caprio’s attacks on Seth’s résumé only make
you want to take another look at Frank Caprio’s résumé:
- When Frank Caprio served as General Treasurer from 2006-2010, he failed to take action to prevent the underfunding of public workers’ pension funds.
- As a candidate for Governor in 2010, Caprio pretended he had nothing to do with the pension crisis and instead blamed public workers and ran on the position that he would slash their pension benefits.
- In 2010, Caprio actually had private talks with the Republicans about running for Governor as a Republican but, after beating Patrick Lynch, he went on to run one of the worst Democratic campaigns in Rhode Island history, coming in third out of four.
- His campaign was so bad that, when hearing that President Obama would not endorse him, he publicly said the President could take his endorsement and “shove it.”
- After coming in third in the 2010 Governor’s race, he dropped out of the Democratic Party and in 2012, rooted for Mitt Romney to defeat President Obama.
- When Caprio decided to run again for his old seat as Treasurer, he first discussed running as a Republican with the GOP State Party chair, just as he did in 2010.
- Finally, he decided to run as a Democrat after his brother David was installed as the new state Party Chair.
- Accepting the State Party Convention’s endorsement, Frank Caprio’s acceptance speech can be easily summed as “I won’t screw up as much as I did last time.”
Here’s a short list of reasons why Seth is the clear
choice:
- Life-long Democrat
- Backed by state and national democrats such as Bill Clinton, Deval Patrick, Patrick Kennedy, Liz Roberts, 13 Democratic city and town committees, RI Progressive Democrats, organized labor, RI-NOW and a host of others.
- Activist investor who has proven he can beat the market while also standing up to big-banks to lower fees and fight predatory financial practices like systemic foreclosure.
- Only candidate in the race who testified at the state and federal level about the dangers of predatory financial services such as payday lending and pawn shop check cashing.
- In addition, Seth has published a detailed plan to make the Treasurer's office an economic engine, including launching an RI green bank and (this is one of my favorites) investing more of the Treasury's dollars locally.
And if you want to read more about Seth and what he
plans to do on behalf of the people of Rhode Island,
click here.