Why
the denial? Why the stealth?
CCA Party's secret clubhouse? There are down sides to operating as a secret society. |
By
Linda Felaco
This is the original of the op-ed that ran in the Westerly Sun.
It
seems churlish at best for newly reelected Charlestown Town Council member
George Tremblay of the Charlestown Citizens Alliance to complain of “egregious
errors” in the Sun’s local election-night reporting when the Sun’s reporters
were pointedly denied admission to the CCA’s invitation-only election-night
party (Letter: “Post-election
story on upsets was off-base,” November 9).
How do I know this? Because I was there that night at the Breachway
Grill, where the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee ended up hosting all
four Sun reporters since they weren’t allowed to cover the CCA party.
Indeed, the reporters weren’t even told the location of said party, presumably out of fear that they might get
it into their heads to show up uninvited. All the reporters were given was a
phone number and the instruction to call at 10 p.m. for the CCA reaction to the
election returns.
Seems to me if you want accurate reporting it behooves you to
grant reporters access. But apparently the CCA’s financial backers prefer to
stay out of the media spotlight.
As
for Tremblay’s denial of the similarities between the GOP and CCA platforms, Sun
reporter Ellyn Santiago, who struck me as nobody’s fool, surely possesses the
reading comprehension skills to discern certain parallels, particularly on the
subject of taxation.
This
is not by any means an error of reporting. Tremblay’s claim that “there exists
no arm of the GOP in Charlestown to address the local issues we address in our
platform” is also incorrect; while the Charlestown Republicans didn’t run any
candidates in the current election cycle, there is in fact a Charlestown
Republican Town Committee, although the CCA has largely taken over the GOP
ecological niche in Charlestown.
Tremblay
even denies knowledge of the party affiliations of the CCA leadership, which is
just plain silly given that voter registrations are a matter of public record. Apparently
in the rarefied atmosphere of the CCA’s secret monthly meetings, which unlike
the meetings of the Charlestown Democratic Town Committee are never advertised
to the public, it’s considered impolite just to ask.
Or
it would be silly if not for the fact that since taking control of town
government, the CCA has been systematically purging people from serving on town
commissions who don’t kowtow to CCA orthodoxy.
Why
so many denials, you might wonder, especially after the CCA’s sweeping
electoral victory, which has given them a lock on every single elected position
in town government?
The
answer can be found in Tremblay’s claim that “we are
not a political party in the traditional sense.”
The fact is in virtually every respect, they are a party and are
subject to all the same rules regarding filing of campaign finance reports,
etc.
The only thing that keeps the state of Rhode Island from
certifying the CCA as a party is that they don’t—or haven’t as yet—run
candidates for statewide office.
I doubt we’ll ever see them run statewide candidates, though, for
the simple reason that they would then be required to open their meetings to
anyone who registered with their party and would not be able to continue
operating in secret.
This, I suspect, is the real reason they are at such pains to deny
having aided in toppling our Democratic state representatives to elect Blake
Filippi and Elaine Morgan.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The CCA Party posted a notice that Filippi and Morgan are special invited guests to the special November 17 Town Council meeting to crown all 13 of the CCA candidates who won Charlestown town office. Not that this means anything, mind you.
EDITOR'S NOTE: The CCA Party posted a notice that Filippi and Morgan are special invited guests to the special November 17 Town Council meeting to crown all 13 of the CCA candidates who won Charlestown town office. Not that this means anything, mind you.