Surprises
no one
By
Will Collette
What
passes for big local political news after the November 8 train wreck of a
national election was the revelation by state Rep. Blake “Flip” Filippi (who
represents District 36 where he may or may not live) that he is a Republican.
For
the past two years, Flip has been masquerading as an “independent” and
sometimes as a “libertarian” even though he affiliated with the miniscule House
Republican caucus from the very beginning.
His legislative agenda was in
lockstep with the House GOP. Consequently, his actual achievements were as
sparse as theirs as well.
The
best Flip could do was to take credit for other people's work. Examples: he claimed credit for Democratic Rep. Brian Patrick Kennedy’s bill to curb
granite dust at the Copar Quarry and Democratic Rep. Bob Craven’s bill to cut
state income tax on Social Security.
Filippi
did, however, regularly come out with whacky, non-starter ideas, including a
string of proposed amendments to the State Constitution, that got him lots of
attention from a gullible news media.
Example: his plan to
have Rhode
Island “secede” from the Eastern Time Zone and switch to Canadian Atlantic Time
so we could do away with Daylight Savings Time.
Filippi
adopted the charade of being an “independent” to curry favor with the
Charlestown Citizens Alliance (CCA Party). The CCA Party publicly disdains partisan
politics and loudly claims that it too is proudly “independent.” But woe onto
any CCA Party member who strays from the orthodox CCA positions hatched in
secret at their private monthly Steering Committee meetings.
That
“independent” mask got Filippi elected since Charlestown is, by far, the
largest voting bloc in the 36th District. Filippi’s new switch to
becoming a Republican also had nothing to do with principles and everything to
do with self-advancement.
By
officially becoming a Republican when he did, Filippi was then able to give his
friend and mentor Rep.
Patricia Morgan (R-West Warwick) the crucial vote she needed to score an
upset win in the contest for House Minority Leader. That position had been
promised to Rep. Michael Chippendale (R-Foster) by outgoing Minority Leader
Rep. Brian Newberry.
Flip
was rewarded for his party switch by being named the House Republican Whip.
This was the prize and it came with what he covets most – media attention. That included a top-of-the-fold
banner headline in the Friday Westerly Sun for a non-news story.
While
Filippi blathered
on to the Sun about the policies and principles of the Republican Party
that convinced him to flip, Flip in fact sold his vote. He traded his cherished “independence” for a smidgeon of added power within the 11-member GOP Caucus. However and perhaps more
important to him, his announcement got him media attention.
But
in truth, based on public records, Filippi was a Republican all along.
Indeed, campaign finance records that showed Filippi to be major donor to the Republican Party throughout the years, including those when he was a so-called “independent.”
In addition, all those campaign finance records offered the first documentation that Filippi has listed Block
Island simply as an “address
of convenience” while he actually lives elsewhere.
There
were a total of 14 state campaign finance records and one federal, all but two
where Flip listed his Mom’s cattle farm in Lincoln as his home address. All
were made after Filippi registered to vote on Block Island, while numerous
legal records showed him living in Lincoln. To see ALL these records, CLICK
HERE.
All
of these campaign contributions were made to Republicans. The actual pace of
Flip’s giving to the GOP accelerated after he supposedly left the Party in
2012.
While
Flip’s party flip probably surprised no one, given his history, his timing is
interesting coming on the heels of the upset election of America’s first orange
President.
Is
Filippi reading Trump’s election as a sign that it’s OK for him to stop being a
closet Republican?
Is that how Flip read the 2016 election numbers?
Well,
it appears that Flip’s arithmetic is wrong.
As the Providence
Journal pointed out, virtually every coastal community in Rhode Island
voted for Hillary Clinton, while Trump won only the rural redneck hinterland.
Filippi’s
sometimes hometown of Lincoln went for Trump, but all the towns in his actual
District – Charlestown, Westerly,
Block Island and South
Kingstown voted for Hillary Clinton.
Block
Island, the place Flip currently claims as home, went for Hillary by 44.4% margin!
Even Charlestown,
Flip’s political base, gave Hillary a 6.8% margin.
Yes,
the Redneck Revolt put Exeter,
Richmond
and Hopkinton
in the red column and denied two intelligent former state legislators, Cathie Cool
Rumsey and Larry Valencia, the chance to return to the Rhode Island Senate and
House, respectively.
Yes,
Exeter, Richmond and Hopkinton re-elected village idiots Elaine Morgan and
Justin Price (again Senate and House, respectively), but Charlestown
voted solidly for Cathie Cool Rumsey.
But Exeter, Richmond and Hopkinton are not in the 36th District.
But Exeter, Richmond and Hopkinton are not in the 36th District.
I
believe that if Filippi had actually drawn a credible Democratic opponent instead of running unopposed, the solid Democratic majority in District 36 who
voted for Hillary would have sent Flip packing to Mom's cattle farm in Lincoln or the
family’s mini-chain of hotels.
He
might even revive his law practice. There are now lots more right-wing hate
groups for him to represent in addition to his
clients, the Oathkeepers. The Oathkeepers have been identified by the Anti-Defamation
League and the Southern
Poverty Law Center as an anti-government hate group.
CLICK HERE for records linking Filippi to the Oathkeepers.
CLICK HERE for records linking Filippi to the Oathkeepers.
In
the four towns that comprise House District 36, 16,771 voters chose Hillary, compared
to 11,773 for Trump.
Running unopposed, Filippi only received a total of 6,526 votes
(112 people wrote in someone else's name).
If
Filippi thinks his change of stripes will somehow further his political career,
he’s going to have to look outside this District. But I think most political
observers would agree that Flip already has his eyes set on some other
political prize well beyond Rhode Island House District 36.