Projo Politics Blog

May 11, 2008 - May 17, 2008 Archives

May 17

Photo: Cousins Patrick and Caroline Kennedy meet at the hospital

7:04 PM Sat, May 17, 2008 | |
By Andrea Panciera    Email

patrick_caroline.bmp
AP photo / Winslow Townson
U.S. Rep. Patrick Kennedy, D-R.I., left, is greeted by his cousin, Caroline Kennedy, as he arrives at and she departs from Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, today, where Patrick's father Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., is hospitalized.

A throng of reporters gathered for word outside the hospital soon after reports surfaced that the senior senator had been airlifted there. The media were collected in a roped off area on the sidewalk about 100 yards from the hospital’s main entrance, where there was no sign of extraordinary security precautions for the senator.

More than a dozen television cameras representing local and national media outlets were trained on the front door in the event that a hospital spokesperson or family member might speak publicly.

None did.

At 8 p.m., more than 10 hours after some reporters first gathered on the sidewalk, hospital spokesperson Peggy Slasman distributed a written statement from the senator's primary care physician, Dr. Larry Ronan (who also works as an internist for the Red Sox), noting that Kennedy was "resting comfortably, and watching the Red Sox game with his family."

Slasman also delivered 33 Papa Ginos pizzas and four cases of water to the reporters, cameramen and photographers –– who numbered about 30 at that time –– who had spent much of the day waiting for a live update that never came.

According to reports before 7 p.m., he was recovering in good spirits from a seizure suffered at his Cape Cod home.

-- Steve Peoples, of the Journal State House Bureau, with reports from the Associated Press

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Sherry Temple wrote, I hope Senator Kennedy is doing well and recovers fully and quickly. Btw, what happened to Patrick Kennedy's hand? It looks like broken fingers on...

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Spokeswoman: Sen. Kennedy conscious, talking to family

5:26 PM Sat, May 17, 2008 | |
By Andrea Panciera    Email

BOSTON (AP) -- A spokeswoman for Sen. Edward Kennedy says he is conscious and talking to family after he suffered a seizure in his Cape Cod home and was flown to a Boston hospital.

The 76-year-old Massachusetts Democrat fell ill at his home in the family compound in Hyannisport Saturday morning and was rushed to a local hospital. He later was flown to Massachusetts General Hospital to determine the cause of the seizure.

Spokeswoman Stephanie Cutter said he is "conscious, talking, joking with family."

His wife and children are among those with him at the hospital.

Kennedy's son, Rhode Island U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy, left Washington, D.C. this afternoon, on a flight to Boston to join his siblings, Edward Kennedy Jr., and Kara Kennedy, at his father's bedside, said Kennedy spokeswoman Robin Costello.

Patrick Kennedy received many messages from friends and political allies. ``He would like to thank everybody for their thoughts and prayers,'' said Costello.

Also at the hospital was Sen. Kennedy's niece, Caroline, daughter of Kennedy's late brother, President John F. Kennedy Jr.

Get the latest from the Associated Press ...

-- With reports from Journal staff writer Scott MacKay

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Sen. Kennedy stricken

4:18 PM Sat, May 17, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Scott MacKay    Email

Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the Democratic party's liberal lion, was in Massachusetts Hospital this afternoon after suffering a seizure at his home on Cape Cod this morning. Kennedy, 76, was rushed by ambulance to Cape Cod Hospital from his familiy's compound in Hyannisport and was flown to Boston after two hours in the emergency room on the Cape.

Details on how seriously Kennedy had been stricken were scarce. The senator's spokeswoman, Melissa Wagoner, said only that Kennedy was undergoing a medical tests.

``He is undergoing a battery of tests at Massachusette General Hospital to determine the cause of the seizure,'' said Wagoner. ``Senator Kennedy is resting comfortably and, it is unlikely we will know anything more for the next 48 hours.''

Kennedy's son, Rhode Island U.S. Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy, left Washington, D.C. this afternoon, on a flight to Boston to join his siblings, Edward Kennedy Jr., and Kara Kennedy, at his father's bedside, said Kennedy spokeswoman Robin Costello.

Patrick Kennedy received many messages from friends and political allies. ``He would like to thank everybody for their thoughts and prayers,'' said Costello.

Reporters were kept about 100 yards from the hospital entrance near the Charles River in Boston. About 30 reporters and photojournalists were on hand, awaiting a statement from the Kennedy family.

First elected in 1962, Kennedy has never lost an election in Massaschusetts. Last October, he had surgery to repair a blockage in a major neck artery. The procedure on his left carotid artery, a main blood conduit to the brain, was performed at Mass. General by the hospital's chief of vascular surgery, Dr. Richard Cambria.

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May 15

Carcieri's O'Reilly Factor appearance postponed

11:26 AM Thu, May 15, 2008 | |
By Jack Perry    Email

Governor Carcieri's appearance on The O'Reilly Factor on Fox News to talk about his executive order cracking down on illegal immigration is being rescheduled by the program, the governor's office said today.

Carcieri's interview was scheduled to appear on the program hosted by Bill O'Reilly at 8 and 11 tonight, which will not happen, according to the governor's office. His schedule for today originally had the governor doing the segment between 5:15 p.m. and 6 p.m. for the airings later tonight.

No information was yet available on when the appearance will be scheduled.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

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Kathleen wrote, I'm a union Democrat who believes firmly that undocumented workers have nothing to do with my diminshed pension returns. My anemic returns are entirely attributable...

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May 14

More on governor's immigration order, in FAQs and on Fox

5:26 PM Wed, May 14, 2008 | |
By Andrea Panciera    Email

Governor Carcieri is scheduled to be on the O'Reilly Factor on Fox News tomorrow night to talk about his executive order cracking down on illegal immigration.

The governor's office issued a news release saying Carcieri will tape a brief interview tomorrow with host Bill O’Reilly. The interview is expected to air at 8 and 11 p.m., according to the governor's office.

The announcement followed the release earlier this afternoon by the governor's office of a frequently-asked-questions answer sheet based on the controversial executive order, issued at the end of March.

The governor's office said the document is designed to answer questions about how the order is carried out. See the document here. The six-page FAQ sheet poses 26 questions followed by answers from the governor's office. The document is also offered in Spanish.

“As people have requested information about the executive order, we determined that a Frequently Asked Questions document might prove informative and helpful in dispelling misconceptions," Carcieri said in a statement. “I expect that the document will be constantly updated as new information becomes available and new questions or concerns come to light.”

Carcieri said he is setting up an advisory group to monitor how the order is carried out so there are no "unintended consequences" for immigrants here legally. Possible members' names are being gathered; a final slate will be presented to Carcieri within two weeks. The plan is for the panel to meet for the first time this summer.

-- projo.com staff writer Michael P. McKinney

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Reagan-Lincoln Day Dinner -- a GOP fundraiser -- tonight at Rhodes

5:09 PM Wed, May 14, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Mike McKinney    Email

The Rhode Island Reagan-Lincoln Day Dinner, part of an effort to raise money for the state's Republican candidates, is tonight.

Former Cranston Mayor Stephen P. Laffey and local town committee leaders, members and guests will gather at Rhodes on the Pawtuxet, 60 Rhodes Place, Cranston, at 6 p.m. There will be refreshments at the bar and food stations.

Among invited guests are Governor Carcieri, party leaders and all candidates for national committeeman and committeewoman, according to an e-mailed news release from the South Kingstown Republican Town Committee.

A news release says that for every $100 ticket each local GOP sells, the net proceeds will go directly in the local GOP bank account. So when a local GOP sells 50 tickets to the local community, $5,000 goes into that GOP bank account and $1,250 (based on $25 cost) of that money will be a check to Rhodes on the Pawtuxet for net proceeds of $3,750.

Laffey left office after a failed bid to unseat then-U.S. Sen. Lincoln D. Chafee in a 2006 Republican primary. The Journal has reported Laffey is thought to be readying for a potential run for governor in 2010.

Laffey and his wife have contributed to defray the event's cost "to maximize benefit to local GOP," the release notes.

The Journal's Political Scene column reported in late March that Laffey said he donated $1,000 to the Cranston GOP to arrange the venue for the fundraiser.

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Spygate: Sen. Specter to discuss Walsh meeting today

11:06 AM Wed, May 14, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Jack Perry    Email

U.S. Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa, is scheduled to hold a news conference at noon today after meeting yesterday with former Patriots videotape assistant Matt Walsh.

Earlier in the day yesterday, Walsh met with NFL commissioner Roger Goodell, who announced after yesterday's meeting that further sanctions against the Patriots over the Spygate controversy were unlikely.

Goodell said Walsh affirmed that he does not have, nor did he make, a tape of the St. Louis Rams’ final walkthrough before Super Bowl XXXVI, in 2002.

Specter has helped keep the Spygate situation alive with comments critical of the league’s handling of the situation. Many have said, however, that his ties to Philadelphia-based Comcast, which is locked in a battle with the NFL over rights to the NFL Network, is driving him. Also, the Pats have had success in recent years over the league’s two Pennsylvania-based teams, the Eagles and the Steelers.

Specter was initially scheduled to hold a press conference yesterday.

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Sen. Whitehouse to attend hearing on Alzheimer's

11:01 AM Wed, May 14, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Jack Perry    Email

U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, a member of the Senate Aging Committee, is scheduled to attend a hearing this morning on Alzheimer’s disease, during which former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor is expected to speak publicly for the first time about her husband’s struggles with the disease, according to the senator's office.

Witnesses are expected to provide an update on research and treatments, issues on early-onset diagnoses and the need for a comprehensive strategy as more Americans are diagnosed with the disease, according to the U.S. Senate Special Committee on Aging.

The disease currently affects 5 million Americans, according to a committee press release.

Whitehouse is expected to testify but it's unclear when.
C-Span-3 plans to carry the hearing live.

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May 12

Rep. Kennedy turns Obama support into action in W. Va.

3:55 PM Mon, May 12, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Andrea Panciera    Email

Rep. Patrick J. Kennedy hit the campaign trail over the weekend for presidential candidate Barack Obama.

The Rhode Island Democrat attended a voter registration rally in Providence for Senator Obama of Illinois Saturday morning, according to the congressman’s office.

Kennedy then flew into Charleston, W. Va., for an overnight visit in preparation for tomorrow’s Democratic primary there.

Kennedy, who endorsed Obama in January, addressed campaign volunteers in Charleston, attended a canvasser’s kick off in Buckhannon, and visited an Obama headquarters and call center in Elkins.

According to an Associated Press report, Obama expects Clinton to win tomorrow's primary in West Virginia, which has large numbers of working-class whites - a group that usually backs the former first lady - as well as a strong military tradition.

Obama used his visit to Charleston to combat critics' claims that he is not particularly patriotic or ready to be commander in chief, in part because he never served in the military, no longer wears a lapel flag pin and opposed the Iraq war from the start.

-- John E. Mulligan, Journal Washington bureau, with Associated Press reports

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Public buildings named for both living and dead

9:19 AM Mon, May 12, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

Should the state be naming buildings after Rhode Islanders who haven’t yet breathed their last?

The critical question of above ground or below took on a life of its own on the House floor last week, with Majority Leader Robert Watson, R-East Greenwich, hardly able to keep a straight face as he argued against naming the new Kent County Court House after former Gov. Philip W. Noel, who is very much alive.

It wasn’t personal, he said. “I certainly believe there is a building in this state, possibly even this building that should be named after Governor Noel.”

But only in Rhode Island would it seem normal to name buildings after those who may visit or, more bizarre, work in them.

Rep. John Patrick Shanley Jr., D-South Kingstown, pointed out that however strange, the living monument is a bit of wacky tradition here. A courthouse, the airport terminal and a variety of other buildings all post names of live bodies.

At the University of Rhode Island alone, three buildings have been named after the living: former Gov. J. Joseph Garrahy has a residence hall named in his honor, as does the Wiley family, of which several members are still living. And just two or three weeks ago, the Assembly voted to name Independence Hall after retiring Provost Beverly Swan, who, Shanley says thankfully, is expected to be “breathing with [him]” when the building is dedicated this week.

So perhaps it should come as no surprise that the Assembly voted overwhelmingly to keep the Philip Noel Judicial Complex proposal, well, alive.

-- By Cynthia Needham and Scott MacKay

Journal staff writers

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Howard Dean huddles with local Democrats

9:17 AM Mon, May 12, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

It was a tale of two Democratic parties Thursday night.

At Providence Prime restaurant, on Federal Hill, a group of party elite fundraisers and elected officials met for a private dinner with Democratic National Chairman Howard Dean. Huddling with Dean were Lt. Gov. Elizabeth Roberts, Providence Mayor David N. Cicilline, state General Treasurer Frank Caprio, fundraising activist Susan Weiner, former Providence Mayor Joseph R. Paolino Jr., state AFL-CIO president Frank Montanaro, AFL-CIO secretary-treasurer George Nee, Edna O’Neill Mattson, the party’s national committeewoman, business leader Alan Hassenfeld and Richard Licht, the former lieutenant governor.

Dean, a former Vermont governor, exchanged greetings with old Rhode Island friends and then quickly retreated to the private dinner in the back of Prime, the restaurant favored by Bill Clinton when he is in town. The group was brought together by Mark Weiner, Clinton confidant and top party fundraiser. Dean was in town prospecting for campaign money for the fall campaign against Republicans.

The Federal Hill confab was a somewhat buttoned-down affair; across town, a comparatively raucous Democratic event was in full swing: a fundraiser for Rep. David Segal, D-Providence, who represents the Fox Point neighborhood, a slice of the city’s downtown and East Providence. Segal’s time, held at Nick-a-Nees, the celebrated tavern in the city’s Jewelry District, drew hundreds of young Democrats.

Nick-a-Nees is a studiously casual joint, known for its jukebox (Dylan, Sinatra, blues), dog-friendly atmosphere, Red Sox fans and bartenders who are on a first-name basis with all the regulars. Think Cheers with grit.

Shirts and ties were in the minority, but there were a few lobbyists and labor union types, including Bob Walsh, executive director of the National Education Association of Rhode Island, the teachers union; Bob Mauro, of Local 401 of the Service Employees International Union; Jim Cenerini, of the state AFL-CIO; and Lucie Burdick, president of the Rhode Island Alliance of Social Workers. Lobbyist Wally Gernt was also spied at the bar.

Providence Mayor Cicilline was the only politician to make the trip from the Dean event to Segal’s.

Two bands entertained: the brassy What Cheer Marching Brigade, and Trolley, an ensemble of Brown University students. Hundreds spilled into the Nick-a-Nee’s parking lot to listen to What Cheer and mingle on a rainless evening.

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Speaker Murphy hears Ireland’s Bertie Ahern

9:16 AM Mon, May 12, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

The final days before Bertie Ahern stepped down last week after 11 years as Ireland’s prime minister were packed with last-minute activities.

Ahern made several trips to the United States, including one to Boston in which he bestowed $2 million on the John F. Kennedy Library.

But it was his trip to Washington that put Rhode Island in the spotlight.

House Speaker Murphy traveled to the nation’s capital to meet with Ahern and sit in on the statesman’s address to a joint session of Congress.

Murphy told Political Scene he was proud to be on hand for one of Ahern’s last official speeches. “Afterwards, I had the opportunity to meet with Prime Minister Ahern in the office of Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, along with Congressmen [James R.] Langevin and Patrick Kennedy and John Murphy of Home Loan Investment Bank.”

The speaker said he was also impressed by Ahern’s remarks about continuing the strong relationship between this country and Ireland.

In answer to Political Scene’s favorite question: no taxpayer money was used for Murphy’s one-day trip.

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ALS fundraiser will honor the late Tony Marcella

9:14 AM Mon, May 12, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

The celebration of the life of Tony Marcella continues this week with a fundraiser in Marcella’s honor.

Friends will gather Friday evening at Newport’s Ocean Cliff Hotel for music, hors d’oeuvres and a silent auction. Proceeds from the event will go to the ALS Foundation and the Marcella family.

Marcella, a lobbyist, former chief aide to Congressman Kennedy and former executive assistant to Rhode Island House Majority Leader Fox, died in March of complications from ALS. He was 43.

And for those of you who missed it last week …

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Pagliarini joins Office of Higher Education

9:13 AM Mon, May 12, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

John “J.R.” Pagliarini, dismissed 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, the commissioner of higher education, confirmed that Pagliarini has a $115,000-a year job as associate commissioner of higher education. When he worked in Carcieri’s office, Pagliarini was paid $124,190.

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

Pagliarini has a public employment history dating to the 1980s administration of Gov. Edward D. DiPrete and is well-known and well-liked in Republican circles in Rhode Island. He was the communications director for Lincoln D. Chafee when Chafee was mayor of Warwick.

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

Warner said he did not create a new job for Pagliarini; he is filling a vacant position. (Warner 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 him. “Nobody ordered me to take him,” Warner said in an interview. “I recruited him on my own initiative.”

Pagliarini is studying ways to make administrative functions at the state colleges and the University of Rhode Island more efficient, and he is formulating an action plan in the event of a flu pandemic at the state colleges.

smackay@projo.com

cneedham@projo.com

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