The failed recall effort in North Kingstown
“How does the story end? With a dark money whimper,” writes Tom Sgouros. “Tuesday was the deadline for turning in signatures, and none were turned in at all. The word in town is that in the end Brimer and company had gathered fewer than 700 signatures, not even close to half the signatures they needed.”
By Tom Sgouros in UpRiseRI
The news you may not
have heard on October 12 was about what didn’t happen, and how one of the most
effective illusions in Rhode Island politics was pierced.
Some background: In
August of this year, 50 North Kingstown citizens, led by Mary Brimer, Republican member of the
Town Council, filed a petition to force a recall election against School
Committee member Jennifer Lima,
an outspoken advocate for diversity and equity in the schools.
Running on her
experience founding Toward an
Anti-racist North Kingstown (TANK), Lima got more votes in November 2020 than any other town
candidate, which wasn’t bad for her first election.
But that didn’t stop a
committed band of (mostly) Republicans from filing to recall her for “publicly
stat[ing] an opinion that does not reflect the views of her constituents.”
(This is a quote from their petition, which can be
found here.)
According to the town
charter, when presented with such a petition, the Board of Canvassers must respond with official signature
sheets. The recall proponents then had 60 days to gather 3102 signatures to
force an election. If recalled, Lima would have been replaced with one of the
Republicans she beat last fall.
This was, of course,
just a cynical move to undo an election Republicans could not win fairly. They
calculated that they had a better chance in a low-turnout election of angry
voters than in the general election.
So they began angering
people to gather signatures, making up stupid lies about “critical race theory”
and the wounded self-esteem of little children being taught they are all equal.
And Marxism. Lima was described as radical, dangerous, and a communist
puppeteer orchestrating all manner of evil from deep behind the scenes.
It was all laughable
until the money showed up. Late in August, the Gaspee Project, an affiliate of Mike Stenhouse and his Center for Freedom and Apple Pie, decided that Lima was public
enemy number one, and they focused statewide attention on her and North
Kingstown.
Glossy mailers began to appear in mailboxes and under windshield wipers around town, telling people about Lima’s evil ways. A polished web site materialized that seemed to claim that Mel Benson, a longtime state representative and school committee member, would have endorsed this recall effort.
Mel, of course, was a
longtime Democrat who went to all the national conventions, and was proud of
having met more than her share of presidential candidates. She was also Black,
making her a convenient asset for the Gaspee Project and their “Friends of NK
Schools” to claim, and she died a few years ago, so was not able to object to
their obscene use of her name and image.
Attendance at school
committee meetings went way up as people gathered to denounce the evil
diversity initiatives (and masks), and tables to collect signatures appeared at
the town’s transfer station and the post office. There was certainly money in
town, but nobody knows who was funding it all. The state’s election disclosure
laws do not cover the signature-gathering phase of a special election.
So what happened? For
one thing, the people who showed up to yell at the school committee about how
Lima and CRT were routinely outnumbered by 3 or 4 to 1. For another, the school
committee membership held together and, along with all the other town Democrats
in local and state offices, they denounced the recall effort in a joint letter.
And Lima raised a
small avalanche of money she did not solicit, pulling in four times as much in
August and September as she had raised the previous November’s election.
How does the story
end? With a dark money whimper. The tables didn’t appear at the post office
last week, and rumors of canvassers declined. Tuesday was the deadline for
turning in signatures, and none were turned in at all. The word in town is that
in the end Brimer and company had gathered fewer than 700 signatures, not even
close to half the signatures they needed.
The lesson of the last
month appears to be this: the dark money that fuels hate campaigns like we saw
in North Kingstown is secret, vicious, and unprincipled, but also ineffective.
It turns out that dollars don’t sign petitions or vote. But they can look
effective and so we spend time and energy opposing them. This is what bullies do.
Statewide, the RI
Center for Freedom and Apple Pie and the Gaspee Project certainly look
effective. Director Mike Stenhouse and his team issue press releases and email
blasts every day, invite people onto their podcast and cable show, appear on
news shows, and do their level best to stir dissension, amplify anger, and
insult well-meaning people doing the hard work to improve our state.
Their reward for that
is attention, from which Stenhouse doubtless earns a comfortable living;
tribunes for the rich have always done well for themselves, even if they are
seldom allowed to join the ranks of those they serve.
But it’s all a show:
Gaspee and Apple Pie represent nothing more than a bunch of wealthy donors who
have the money to create and intensify anger. They can throw dust in the air
and bully the timid, but that’s all. Our state will be a lot better off when
this illusion is widely understood, even if news show ratings suffer as a
result.