Candidates
do not want to be associated with Michael Earnheart
By Steve
Ahlquist for UpRiseRI
“I look at it like this: I have a responsibility to everyone who steps on this property,” said Providence resident Joseph Casoli in a telephone interview.
“Whether it be Dan McKee, whether it be Gina Raimondo, whether it be the homeless people, whether it be bus drivers, police officers – whoever steps foot on my property – and believe me, they all have, and many times all at once, I have to protect them.
“I have to protect them
from getting hurt and I have to protect their privacy.”
Casoli was talking about
pictures on social media taken at a party held at his Langdon Street home in
Providence on Saturday night.
The pictures show
Lieutenant Governor Daniel McKee speaking
with, or at least in close proximity to, Michael
Earnheart, the endorsed and
then un-endorsed Democratic
candidate for the House Seat currently held by progressive Representative Moira Walsh (Democrat,
District 3, Providence).
Earnheart, now a
Democrat, was an outspoken MAGA sign wielding Trump supporter until he decided
to run against Walsh.
Amid a controversial series of endorsements by the Rhode Island Democratic Party, Earnheart stood out and the story of his endorsement and subsequent rescission of that endorsement scored national attention.
Casoli maintains that
the pictures in question were taken by McKee’s Democratic challenger for
Lieutenant Governor, Aaron Regunberg.
Regunberg did not take
the picture, and the person who did does not work for the Regunberg campaign.
Regunberg, like Walsh, is a progressive Democrat and the State Representative
from District 4 in Providence.
In an attempt to find
out the context of the pictures, I put them up on social media (as did Rhode Island Public Radio reporter Ian Donnis) asking for
clarification.
From sources both anonymous
and public, here’s what I’ve pieced together:
The pictures were taken
at a big, annual summer bash held by Casoli at his Langdon Street home. Around
200 people attended, including “lots” of elected officials and candidates.
In addition to McKee,
Regunberg and Earnheart, I have sources reporting that Senator Maryellen Goodwin (Democrat,
District 1, Providence), Providence City Councilmember Nicholas Narducci (Ward 4)
and Ward 4 Ward Committee Vice Chair Florette
Ruggiero were in attendance.
According to Rhode Island Democratic Party Executive Director Tolulope Kevin Olasanoye, Councilmember Narducci wrote a letter of recommendation to Rhode Island Democratic Party Chair Joseph McNamara on behalf of Earnheart.
The contents of that letter have not been released.
Narducci was also
wearing a McKee sticker at the party, say witnesses.
Casoli said Earnheart
was invited to the party because, “he was a friend of mine.”
Earnheart wore a Daniel
McKee sticker at the event. This does not mean much, said one attendee to me,
because “there was a little girl handing out McKee stickers, so it wasn’t an
exclusive thing to acquire one and put it on.”
That said, under the
direction of people associated with the McKee campaign, Earnheart removed the
sticker and attempted to place himself next to Regunberg so that a McKee associate
could try to get a picture of Earnheart and Regunberg.
After failing to get himself into a picture with Regunberg, Earnheart put the McKee sticker back on.
After failing to get himself into a picture with Regunberg, Earnheart put the McKee sticker back on.
After the party,
pictures began to circulate on social media courtesy of UpriseRI and RINPR.
Regunberg, in a Tweet,
accused Earnheart and McKee of “working together.”
Note that nothing
Regunberg wrote in his Tweet about McKee is untrue. In trying to place
Earnheart next to Regunberg for an incriminating picture, the the
Earnheart and McKee campaigns did work together at the party.
Nevertheless, the next
day, McKee hit back, comparing Regunberg to President Donald Trump on Twitter
and Facebook.
McKee went way overboard
considering someone from his campaign actually did coordinate with Earnheart,
at least in so far as to get a picture of Earnheart with Regunberg for
political purposes.
Though McKee says he
does not support Earnheart, Earnheart’s actions at the party suggest that he
supports McKee.
McKee was silent on
Earnheart’s endorsement until after the endorsement was rescinded:
“Suppose someone was
here without their wife?” asked Casoli. “There’s no way I would allow anyone to
take pictures without my permission or without the permission of those people
being photographed.”
Casoli is furious with
Regunberg and will not be inviting him to future parties. “If that’s the length
he wants to go to to become Lieutenant Governor, God help the State of Rhode
Island,” said Casoli.
To be clear, Regunberg
did not take the picture of Earnheart and McKee.
In what may ultimately
wind up being a minor issue in what has proven to be a contentious campaign for
Lieutenant Governor, one thing is for sure:
Candidates do not want
to be associated with Michael Earnheart.
Michael Earnheart did
not respond to a request for comment.