Projo Politics Blog

May 4, 2008 - May 10, 2008 Archives

May 8

Governor's ex-deputy chief of staff has new job -- in higher ed office

2:25 PM Thu, May 08, 2008 | |
By Scott MacKay    Email

John "J.R.'' Pagliarini, dimissed in February by Governor Carcieri from his job as the governor's deputy chief of staff, has landed at the state Office of Higher Education.

Jack Warner, commissioner of higher education, confirmed today that Pagliarini has a $115,000-a year state job as associate commissioner of higher education. When he worked at Carcieri's office, Pagliarini earned roughly $118,000 annually.

After his dismissal from Carcieri's staff, Carcieri spokesman Jeff Neal said that Pagliarini would be leaving state government.

Pagliarini has has a history dating back to the 1980s administration of former Gov. Edward DiPrete and is well-known and well-liked in in Republican circles in Rhode Island. He was a top aide to Lincoln Chafee when Chafee was mayor of Warwick, where Pagliarini served as the mayor's communications director.

After Chafee became U.S. senator, Pagliarini worked as state director of Chafee's Rhode Island office. Pagliarini has also been a private sector State House lobbyist.

Warner said he did not create a new job for Pagliarini and that Pagliarini is filling a vacant position. Warner himself is a finalist for a job as chancellor of Pennsylvania's state universities.

Pagliarini does not have extensive higher education experience, but Warner said he personally recruited Pagliarini. "Nobody ordered me to take him,'' said Warner in an interview. ``I recruited him on my own initiative.''

Warner said Pagliarini is a talented person whom he has long been impressed with.

Among the projects Pagliarini is working on are studying ways to make administrative functions at the state colleges and the Univesity of Rhode Island more efficient and working on a plan for dealing with a flu pandemic at state colleges, should one break out.

Warner said colleges have been required by the federal government to put together ``a very complex pandemic flu plan'' and thet Pagliarini is working on "coordinating this process.''

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chris wrote, Ummm...can't have a pandemic at state colleges because by definition pandemic is: prevalent throughout an entire country, continent, or the whole world...

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May 7

Carcieri to NEARI: Does Crowley speak for union on immigration?

5:26 PM Wed, May 07, 2008 | |
By Scott MacKay    Email

Just how thin is Governor Carcieri's political skin?

An April 22 letter the governor sent to Robert Walsh, executive director of the National Education Association of Rhode Island, the teachers' union, may provide a clue.

"It has come to my attention that Mr. Patrick Crowley, assistant executive director of the NEARI, has taken a strong position against my recent executive order on illegal immigration,;'' Carcieri wrote in a letter obtained by The Journal.

Referring to a position taken by Crowley, a frequent blogger on RIfuture.org, in an e-mail to a particular group, Carcieri reprises Crowley's criticism of the executive order:

"He (Crowley) states the governor of Rhode Island has committed the worst attack on immigrant's rights in at least a decade by issuing an executive order that targets undocumented immigrants and will affect every Rhode Islander.''

A copy of Crowley's e-mail was not available, but Crowley did not dispute its contents as described by the governor.

In his letter, Carcieri continues, "I would like to know if this is the official position of the National Education Association. Does Mr. Crowley speak for the NEA? I think it is shameful that a person of Mr. Crowley's position would inflame the debate and mischaracterize my executive order. I have made very effort to praise the accomplishments of legal immigrants and celebrate diversity in our state.

"From his position, I would have to assume that the NEA supports the hiring of illegal immigrants, believes it is proper for contractors to do business with the state to hire illegal immigrants and disagrees hat upon release of known illegal criminals from the ACI that we notify ICE. Am I correct in these assumptions?''

When contacted, Crowley said he was surprised that his comments so enraged Carcieri. ``I just couldn't believe it,'' said Crowley, noting that his position is similiar to one taken by some of the state's top religious leadwers, including the Most Rev. Thomas J. Tobin, bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence, and the Rev. Donald Anderson, executive minister of the R.I. State Council of Churches.

NEA's Walsh replied to Carcieri, stating that Crowley's positions are his own. ``Pat does a lot of things,'' said Walsh, referring to Crowley's blogging and union activism as co-chairman of the state's Jobs With Justice group, which supports labor organizing among groups not traditionally well-represented in the labor movement, such as janitors.

The official spokesmen for the NEA on state issues are Walsh and NEA President Lawrence Purtil, Walsh said.

On immigration, the "NEA believes what the courts have ruled, which is that all children no matter where they come from are to be given access to public education without being stigmatized,'' said Walsh.

``I think the governor's letter speaks for itself','' said Jeff Neal, Carcieri's spokesman, when contacted.

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Update: Reed won't commit yet, Whitehouse still with Clinton

11:46 AM Wed, May 07, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Jack Perry    Email

Although Sen. Barack Obama's near-miss in Indiana and his crushing victory in North Carolina have made Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton's pursuit a majority of Democratic convention delegates increasingly implausible, Sen. Jack Reed is one uncommitted party leader who remains unwilling to push her to quit the presidential race.

The Rhode Island senior senator is a superdelegate, one of the unpledged party leaders who hold the key to a nominating majority that neither candidate appears able to attain by the close of the caucus and primary season on June 3.

"I have not put an internal deadline'' on endorsing a Democrat for president, Reed told an interviewer this morning, "but the reality is we can't go much past the middle of June.''

Reed reiterated his intent to let the remaining contests play out-- starting with next Tuesday's West Virginia primary.

A great factor, he said, "is who is best positioned to win in November. This is not about selecting a nominee, it is about selecting a president.''

Reed remains confident that after the remaining votes are cast, it won't take long for Democrats to unite behind a standard-bearer in the general election contest against Republican Sen. John McCain.

U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, Rhode Island’s most prominent Clinton supporter, said he hopes she continues running, despite trailing in the race for delegates. “She’s entitled to fight on and I think she has a good message and I think the process is a good one.’’

But when asked what he’d tell Clinton if she called and reported she was mulling whether to stay in or pull out for the sake of party unity and possibly a chance to be vice president, Whitehouse said, “I’d probably tell her that she should do what’s in her heart.’’

He said she has put an enormous amount of work into a fight in which she has faced a hostile media environment and that she has been steeled by “operating in the toxic environment of Republican smear politics.‘’ Whitehouse declared, “I think she knows very well the position that she’s in and I trust her to make that decision.’’

Meanwhile, one of Obama’s best-known supporters, Lincoln Chafee, a former U.S. senator from Rhode Island and Republican-turned-independent, said he believes the Democratic race is over and can’t understand why Clinton doesn’t grasp the math of the competition for delegates.

As for Clinton setting off on a fresh round of campaigning today, a baffled Chafee asked, “What is the strategy? It eludes me.’’

-- John E. Mulligan, Journal Washington bureau, and M. Charles Bakst, Journal political columnist

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Cheney to speak at Coast Guard Academy graduation

11:12 AM Wed, May 07, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Jack Perry    Email

NEW LONDON, Conn. -- The Coast Guard Academy says Vice President Dick Cheney will speak at its commencement ceremony May 21.

Academy officials say the vice president is set to deliver the keynote address at 11 a.m. at the school's 127th commencement.

President Bush spoke at the academy's graduation last year, and portrayed the Iraq war as a battle between the U.S. and al-Qaida. Homeland Security Secretary Michael Chertoff addressed cadets at the 2006 graduation.

-- The Associated Press

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May 6

Too early, too close to call in Indiana

10:22 AM Tue, May 06, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Jack Perry    Email

SPEEDWAY, Ind. –– Indiana’s crucial Democratic presidential primary is too close to call –– at least if there’s any trend to be gleaned from random chats with the voters of this relatively conservative town, the home of the famous auto-racing track, inside the city limits of Indianapolis.

A sampling of Democratic voters at St. Christopher’s Roman Catholic Church was split down the middle early this morning. That leaves much suspense as to whether Sen. Barack Obama can effectively wrap up his party’s presidential nomination with big victories in Indiana and North Carolina –– or alternatively, whether Sen. Hillary Clinton will score another in her string of wins in big, industrial states in the nation’s heartland.

Click below to read what two voters have to say on primary day –– a sunny spring day of blooming lilacs and red buds with high temperatures expected in the low 80s and high turnouts expected.

-- John E. Mulligan, Journal Washington bureau

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May 5

Rhode Islander engineers big win in Louisiana

7:35 PM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Scott MacKay    Email

A 26-year-old Cranston native spearheaded last Saturday's upset special election of a Democratic U.S. House member from a very conservative district anchored by Baton Rouge and its McMansion suburbs.

Meet Katie Nee, who tomorrow will become the youngest chief of staff in the U.S. House after her boss, U.S. Rep.-elect Don Cazayoux, takes his seat tomorrow. The seat was open because a Republican incumbent left it to become a lobbyist.

Nee was not available for an interview today: She was on an plane from Baton Rouge, a city best-known as the home of Louisiana State University, to Washington.

Katie Nee's father, George Nee, is secretary-treasurer of the Rhode Island AFL_CIO, and her mother, Anne Sliney, is a nurse who works with the Clinton Foundation battling AIDS in Third World countries.

"She seems thrilled,'' said George Nee yesterday."They were a little nervous election night but it all turned out all right in the end.''

Katie went from Cranston High School East to the University of Virginia. She graduated from UVA in 2003 and started working in politics shortly after. Katie Nee worked on Dick Gephardt's 2004 presidential campaign and in losing Democratic campaigns in Republican-leaning House districts in Indiana and Arizona.

At the outset, the Louisiana district near Baton Rouge looked like an unlikely place for a Democratic victory. The seat had been held by Republicans since the 1974 election. President Bush carried it by about a 2 to 1 margin over Democrat John Kerry.

The Republican candidate was Woody Jenkins, a very conservative Republican who tried to tie Democrat Cazayoux to Democratic presidential aspirant Barack Obama, the Illinois senator.

`"This was obviously the Republican test case for nationalizing Congressional races, and it failed completely,'' said Chris Van Hollen of Maryland, chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee.

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Scott MacKay: Reed and Pastore, the parallels

7:03 PM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Scott MacKay    Email

That U.S. Sen. Jack Reed is indeed the "Irish Pastore" was on display once again yesterday at Reed's annual family breakfast at Rhodes-on-the-Pawtuxet banquet hall in his native Cranston.

pastore.jpgThe reference, of course, is to the late Sen. John O. Pastore (D-R.I.), at right, the first Italian-American elected to the U.S. Senate. Pastore served from 1950 to 1976.

Pastore rose from the searing poverty endured by Italian-American immigrants in the early 20th century to become a crucial voice in the establishment of the government programs that limn the Kennedy_Johnson years, from civil rights legislation to Medicare, and legislation that in 1965 lowered barriers to immigration to the U.S. from such countries as Portugal.

He was also the father of public television and a major figure in approval of the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban treaty with the U.S.S.R.

As is the case with Reed, Pastore for the most part avoided the local political fights, the petty dust-ups, State House rivalries and ethnic solidarity that has long marred Democratic politics in this state.

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Rep. Ucci wants term limits for General Assembly

7:55 AM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Peter Phipps    Email

Rep. Stephen R. Ucci, D-Johnston, has proposed that General Assembly members be limited to three terms and that the length of a legislative term be doubled, to four years.

“Longer, four-year terms for lawmakers would result in more stability in the legislature and ultimately more voter trust and confidence in the General Assembly,” Ucci says. “Most legislators cannot accomplish everything they’d like to for their communities in a two-year term.”

Increasing terms to four years would allow them to spend less time campaigning and fundraising and more time working for constituents, he says.

His legislation would limit any senator or representative who has served more than four years in the chamber as of Dec. 31, 2010, to serve two additional four-year terms. Ucci, a lawmaker since 2004, would qualify for the additional time.

The National Conference of State Legislatures reports that 15 states have term limits for legislators.

Ucci’s bill has been referred to the House Judiciary Committee. No hearing has yet been scheduled.

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A small group of General Assembly members are paying for some of their health insurance

7:54 AM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Peter Phipps    Email

The public spotlight placed on their free health-care benefits has prompted several more state lawmakers to offer to pay 10 percent of the cost of the premiums costing up to $16,233 a year for family coverage.

In recent days, Senate Majority Leader M. Teresa Paiva Weed, D-Newport, newly elected Sen. Roger Picard, D-Woonsocket, and Representatives Edwin Pacheco, D-Burrillville, and David Caprio, D-Narragansett, have joined the relatively small group of lawmakers already contributing voluntarily because they thought it was the right thing to do.

Including the newcomers, the number of $13,508-a-year lawmakers paying a portion of their health insurance premiums now stands at 26 of 113.

Others either get it for free, or they get a $2,002 waiver payment for giving it up.

A handful opted to return 10 percent of their waiver payments. Only two — Sen. Paul Jabour, D-Providence, and Rep. John Patrick Shanley, D-South Kingstown — said no to the free insurance and a waiver payment.

Attention turned to the lawmakers’ free health care after an hours-long debate last week, on a bill to cut $168 million out of the current-year budget, that saw lawmaker after lawmaker rise from their seats to talk about the need to “share the burden” and “share the pain.”

A key lawmaker said the House Democratic leadership was willing to attach a requirement that legislators start contributing to the health-dental and vision package, but the senators signaled they were unwilling to go along during an unannounced caucus from which the media was excluded.

According to the legislative business office known as the Joint Committee on Legislative Services (JCLS), the following lawmakers are receiving free health-care packages:

In the House: Representatives Joseph Almeida, Jon Brien, Kenneth Carter, Elaine Coderre, Arthur Corvese, Elizabeth Dennigan, John DeSimone, Grace Diaz, Robert E. Flaherty, Raymond Gallison, Al Gemma, Arthur Handy, J. Russell Jackson, Donald Lally, Jan Malik, Nicholas Mattiello, John McCauley, Joseph McNamara, William Murphy, Eileen Naughton, Peter Palumbo, Peter Petrarca, Henry Rose, William SanBento, Gregory Schadone, Joseph Scott, Agostinho F. Silva, Richard Singleton, Thomas Slater, Peter Wasylyk, Anastasia Williams and Timothy Williamson have family plans. Edith Ajello, Steven Costantino, Gordon Fox, Brian Kennedy, Peter Lewiss, David Segal and Raymond Sullivan have individual plans.

In the Senate, Stephen Alves, Leo Blais, Frank Ciccone, Daniel DaPonte, James Doyle, Hanna Gallo, Daniel Issa, Beatrice Lanzi, J. Michael Lenihan, John McBurney, Michael McCaffrey, Josh Miller, Joseph Montalbano, Paul Moura, Juan Pichardo, Leonidas Raptakis, John C. Revens Jr., Dominick Ruggerio, Susan Sosnowski, and William Walaska have family plans. Daniel Connors, Maryellen Goodwin, Charles J. Levesque and Rhoda Perry have individual plans.

Twenty-one lawmakers who do not want or need the coverage each get a $2,002 annual waiver payment for giving it up.

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Jane Hayward told she needs to be vigilant about potential conflicts

7:45 AM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Peter Phipps    Email

Before getting too comfortable in her new job, Jane Hayward, former health and human services secretary, decided to check in with the state Ethics Commission.

On April 3, Hayward asked the commission what she can and cannot do — under the state’s revolving door law — in her new role as president and CEO of the Rhode Island Health Center Association, a trade organization that provides management services and advocacy for 12 member health centers who, in turn, have grants and/or contracts with the two of the agencies in her former realm: the Department of Human Services and Department of Health.

The revolving-door law places restrictions on what elected and senior officials can do within a year of leaving state government.

In her letter, Hayward said she deliberately negotiated an employment contract that puts someone else — the clinical director — in charge of the management and supervision of the state department contracts until the one-year revolving door ban expires. “In her role as the president and CEO,” the letter promises, Hayward “will have no ministerial or substantive participation in these grants and/or contracts and will not appear before any of the five health and human services departments on behalf of RIHCA.”

Her question to the Ethics Commission: Is that sufficient?

A draft reply from the commission’s executive director, Kent A. Willever, said she needs “to be vigilant in insuring she does not disclose or make use of confidential information acquired during her state service.” But beyond that, Willever said, she can lobby the legislature and general officers, but not represent herself or others before the governor’s office or the Department of Administration for a year. The full Ethics Commission weighs in tomorrow.

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Republican Loughlin considering Kennedy challenge

7:45 AM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Peter Phipps    Email

Rep. John Loughlin, a Tiverton Republican, told Political Scene last week that he is considering whether to challenge U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy in November.

“It has not been ruled in or ruled out at this point,” said Loughlin, 49, a retired Army Reserve lieutenant colonel. “I’ve had some discussion with folks in Washington about the race.”

He declined to identify the “folks” he spoke to in Washington, describing them only as “folks in the Republican Party apparatus.”

Loughlin said he would at the very least run for reelection to his House District 71 seat.

Campaign finance reports suggest that he isn’t well-positioned for a run at an incumbent congressman with deep pockets.

Loughlin had $7,973 in his campaign account as of March 31, according to the latest filing with the state Board of Elections.

Kennedy, meanwhile, had $617,182, according to the Center for Responsive Politics.

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Republicans embrace Operation Clean Government

7:30 AM Mon, May 05, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Peter Phipps    Email

The citizens-advocacy group Operation Clean Government has a new best friend.

Who? The state Republican Party, which issued an e-mail under its own e-Pluribus banner last week reminding one and all of OCG’s “Second Annual Forum.”

And why would the state’s hugely outnumbered Republicans give the organization’s May 10 breakfast at the University of Rhode Island a free election-year plug? Perhaps it’s the theme.

“The General Assembly: Private Deal$ and Public Corruption.”

According to the statement, “the lively discussion will include: a review of legislative corruption and high profile violators; is our legislature worse than those in other states; how corruption affects you; causes of corruption at the legislature; how effective are the existing tools to battle legislative corruption; what else needs to be done to reduce legislative corruption.”

The scheduled panelists include former Republican Attorney General Arlene Violet; WPRO talk show host John DiPietro; Channel 10 political reporter Bill Rappleye, former Senate policy adviser Kenneth Payne; Ross Cheit, a Brown University political science professor and member of the state Ethics Commission; and Edward Achorn, deputy editorial page editor for The Providence Journal. Onetime Channel 6 anchor Dave Layman will moderate. Further information on the cost and location is available at www.ocgri.org

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