Projo Politics Blog

June 2, 2008 Archives

June 2

Reed still holding off on presidential endorsement

1:08 PM Mon, Jun 02, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Mike McKinney    Email

PROVIDENCE -- U.S. Sen. Jack Reed isn't giving a timetable on when he'll endorse a Democratic candidate for president, even as the final nominating contests loom.

The Rhode Island Democrat said Monday during an appearance in Providence that he's looking carefully to see what happens in Tuesday's primaries in South Dakota and Montana, where front-runner Sen. Barack Obama is favored over Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton.

Reed says the most important thing is for there to be a Democratic president elected in November, and that means pulling the party together when the nominee is chosen.

Fellow Rhode Island Democrat Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse, a Clinton supporter, agrees it will be important for Democrats to come together around a candidate soon. He hopes a candidate will be chosen by Independence Day.

-- The Associated Press

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Obama supporters to hold R.I. fundraiser June 17

12:20 PM Mon, Jun 02, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Scott MacKay    Email

U.S. Sen. Barack Obama's Rhode Island supporters are putting together a fundraiser focused on the local health care community. The event is scheduled for June 17 at 5:30 p.m. at a location to be announced.

The guest speaker will be David M. Cutler, a Harvard University expert on health care economics. Cutler worked in former President Bill Clinton's administration in the 1990s, and in 2004 was an adviser to the presidential campaign of U.S. Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass. Cutler is now a health care adviser to the Obama presidential campaign.

Tickets for the event are $150 per person. For further information, contact Jeff Padwa, the Rhode Island finance co-chairman for the Obama campaign, at 935-8571 or at jpadwa@cox.net

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No lines forming to challenge Reed, Kennedy

9:41 AM Mon, Jun 02, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

Within the next two weeks, state Republicans and Democrats will begin doling out their congressional endorsements with a major unanswered question still burning as Political Scene went to press: Will the GOP be able to muster anyone to run against Rep. Patrick Kennedy and Sen. Jack Reed?

Or will two members of Rhode Island’s all-Democrat congressional delegation slide to reelection unchallenged by a Republican candidate?

Late last week, Federal Hill clothing store owner Joseph Zuccolo, 51, of North Providence, confirmed that he is once again thinking about mounting a Republican challenge to Kennedy, having taken out candidacy papers two years ago and then had second thoughts.

On March 12, the owner of Zuccolo’s Fine Men’s Clothing filed notice with the Federal Election Commission of the formation of his Joe Zuccolo For Congress Committee.

In 2006, Zuccolo said, he backed away because “organizationally and financially it wasn’t right for us.” Asked what has changed since then to make him a more viable candidate, he said: “Now we feel we want to and God willing, we will.”

While he did not elaborate, Zuccolo said he hasn’t raised any money yet for a race against Kennedy, who had $617,182 in his campaign account at the March 31 end of the last reporting period. But Zuccolo said he believes that he and his unpaid campaign manager, Dana Peloso, 25 — whom he identified as a candidate for state representative in Warren — have the time to pull together the necessary money and campaign organization to give the 1st Representative District race a good shot.

(If Peloso’s name sounds familiar, he was one of the organizers of former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee’s Rhode Island campaign, a former chairman of Roger Williams University’s College Republicans, and one of two conservative talk show hosts bounced from Roger Williams’ student-run radio station in April 2007 for repeating more than 30 times the phrase that led to national shock jock Don Imus’ firing: “nappy-headed hos.” In his own defense at the time, Peloso said they used the words appropriately in the context of a discussion about Imus.)

Zuccolo’s campaign platform? He said a congressman needs to be “more proactive” on the big issues of the day, such as education and energy. His only campaign promise at this point is to “meet with the people of Rhode Island … address their needs … and keep them informed.”

In an interview on Friday, state GOP Chairman Giovanni Cicione said two other possible Kennedy challengers were still weighing the possibility.

Before the day was over, however, one had pulled his name out of the speculation field: Republican Rep. John Loughlin, of Tiverton.

While tempted, Loughlin said, a run for Congress would not be “economically feasible” at this point, “and besides, I really like my job as a member of the loyal opposition in the Rhode Island House of Representatives.” (Cicione would not identify the third potential candidate on his scouting roster.)

Cicione was less optimistic about the chances of lining up a Republican to challenge Reed, saying: “I am not as convinced. That’s a 50-50.”

He was more optimistic about GOP chances of picking up seats in the General Assembly during what he believes may be a watershed year, with more Democratic incumbents voluntarily relinquishing their seats than Rhode Island has seen in many years.

By Katherine Gregg
Journal State House Bureau

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Birds of prey circling Smith Hill

9:39 AM Mon, Jun 02, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

In another sign that state government is in trouble, birds of prey have begun circling Smith Hill.

Literally.

A state Department of Health employee reported last week that a hawk had killed a seagull in the north parking lot. The hawk was apparently picking at the gull’s remains on the roof of a silver Honda Thursday morning.

“If this is your car, you may wish to check on its condition since remnants of the kill have been left on the roof. The hawk has now moved onto the roof of a red station wagon,” employee Brenda Sullivan advised in an e-mail to various state employees.

Sullivan’s message prompted a pun-laden response from Health Director David R. Gifford, who had determined the carcass-stained car belonged to a state employee.

“I hate to tar and FEATHER [her] any further, but I did check with DOA and she can not submit her car wash BILL due to the budget crises at hand,” Gifford wrote Thursday afternoon. “Though I am sure that this event will SOAR to the top of employee complaints about problems with our parking lots, I am not sure we can solve this problem.”

Political Scene obtained the e-mail exchange from Rep. Raymond E. Gallison Jr., D-Bristol, who did not appear to be amused.

“While Rome burns, aka the State is facing a huge deficit, this is what is going on at DOH,” Gallison declared in an e-mail to various media entities Friday.

--By Steve Peoples
Journal State House Bureau

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Newly minted senator gets committee seats

9:37 AM Mon, Jun 02, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

A month into his move across the rotunda, Rep. — whoops, we mean Sen. — Roger A. Picard has landed himself several committee appointments. On Friday he was named to the Senate Labor and Corporations committees.

The new senator will no doubt find the appointments familiar since he served on the counterpart committees in the House during his 16 years as a representative.

Picard said that experience will allow him to “div[e] right in” on the Senate side at a busy time of year.

He won a special election in April following the death of longtime Sen. Roger Badeau.

--By Cynthia Needham
Journal State House Bureau

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Raptakis globetrotting

9:37 AM Mon, Jun 02, 2008 | | Write the first comment
By Pamela Reinsel Cotter    Email

Sen. Leonidas Raptakis has logged his share of frequent-flier miles this spring.

Raptakis traveled to the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Memorial, in the nation’s capital, 10 days ago as the featured speaker in the National Maritime Day Celebration –– honoring the U.S. Merchant Marine personnel “who gave their lives in service to America and freedom” over the last 75 years.

This week the Coventry senator heads to Athens, Greece, on an expedition to celebrate the “liberty ships,” the World-War II-era cargo ships that made up the majority of Navy’s transport fleet and are now headed toward extinction.

Following the war, 100 of the vessels were sent to Greece, where they were used to the rebuild parts of that country. Citing that contribution, Raptakis several years ago launched a campaign to create an on-ship museum in Athens honoring Hellenic seafarers and the ships’ storied history.

--By Cynthia Needham
Journal State House Bureau

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