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Sunday, June 18, 2017

State Progressives urge NO vote to Mattiello budget

Says budget favors the rich, shows no concern for others
Capri Catanzaro, Rhode Island Progressive Democrats

Image result for mattiello budget
AP Photo/Steven Senne
With the release of Speaker Nicholas Mattiello’s budget, the annual revealing of wolves in Democratic clothing begins. This budget favors the rich and demonstrates a lack of concern for every Rhode Islander who is not so wealthy. 

This budget relies heavily on deep across the board cuts to state agencies--cuts that have not been clearly specified. When a budget refuses to detail openly and clearly exactly what the cuts will be, we are highly suspicious that services, wages, and benefits will suffer.

After the brutal pension cuts, we are already seeing signs of decreasing functionality in our state agencies, with the ongoing UHIP debacle the most visible sign of the dysfunction. Further cuts will only lead to worsening performance. 

While we appreciate that the Speaker's budget pares back some of the worst of the Medicaid cuts advanced in the Governor's original proposal, it still cuts Medicaid, which we find unacceptable.

While our country is uniting against TrumpCare's Medicaid cuts, why would so-called Democrats want to cut Medicaid here in Rhode Island?


We call for a full repeal of all of Raimondo's Medicaid cuts, and we demand that she cease and desist from her cruel Trumpian plan to kick 20,000 Rhode Islanders off of Medicaid administratively. 

The Speaker’s budget, however, worsens one of the few good parts of the Governor's original budget proposal.

It undercuts students at Rhode Island's colleges and universities with shriveled funding. It even scales back the Rhode Island Promise tuition support program, limiting tuition exclusively to new high school graduates for two years at CCRI. 

Meanwhile, the Speaker's budget continues to divert millions to the Commerce Corporation--the controversial agency that did the 38 Studios deal and has evolved into Governor Raimondo's corporate welfare slush fund. 

The budget promotes a "car tax repeal" that fails to replace the revenue that the car tax provides, blowing up the long-term structural deficit.

Without replacement revenue, we risk worsening schools, poorer roads, and shrinking services thanks to the missing funds.

While we support car tax reform, we have always been very clear about how to pay for it--repealing the 2006 income tax cuts for the rich.

With the news that Massachusetts is raising its top income tax rate for the rich by four points, the conservative machine's opposition to repealing the tax cuts for the rich grows more and more absurd. 

This budget misses other financial solutions as well. What the budget does not address is the tremendous sums that are wasted arresting, prosecuting, and imprisoning of nonviolent drug offenders.

Nor does it take advantage of tax revenues that we would see from a Rhode Island marijuana industry. A majority of Rhode Islanders support legalization, but Mattiello insists on prohibiting recreational marijuana despite the fact that his position is both fiscally irresponsible and cruel. 

We are happy to see that the only budget amendment from the left last year--to reinstate RIPTA bus passes--made its way into the budget. We credit Representative John Lombardi for fighting for this key priority on the floor last year.

We see this as a vindication of the strategy of using budget amendments to advance progressive policy goals, and we urge progressive legislators to utilize this proven and successful tactic. 

All said, it is a great budget for the wealthy and the politically connected corporate interests. It is a bad budget for the middle class, the poor, and supporters of economic growth.

It also a good example of the machine's single-minded determination to shift money from the many to the few—in any way possible and at any cost. Democrats in the legislature should vote against this clearly right-wing budget. 

The people are watching."