Sec of State Sends PawSox CEO Congrats Letter and Opponents Warning Letter

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Sec of State Sends PawSox CEO Congrats Letter and Opponents Warning Letter

The leadership of the Pawtucket Red Sox received a congratulatory letter from the office of Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea about their effort to sell the team to new ownership, but opponents of a move from Pawtucket received threatening letters.  

A letter sent to Pawtucket Red Sox Chief Executive Officer Michael Tamburro, outlining the state's lobbying statute, began with, "Congratulations on the exciting new developments at the Pawtucket Red Sox, a venerable Rhode Island Institution." 

In contrast, a Pawtucket citizen's letter started with, "It has come to my attention through media reports and the Organizing Pawtucket website that you are the head of Organizing for Pawtucket, and that you may be engaging in conversation with Rhode Island state government officials on behalf of that entity."  

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"I think the purpose of the letters is exactly the same, I disagree there's a difference to them," said Secretary of State Nellie Gorbea on Tuesday.

See what the RI ACLU -- and a vocal stadium opponent -- had so say below the letters. 

"The ACLU has long been concerned about the breadth and vagueness of Rhode Island's lobbying law, but I don't know enough about Organizing Pawtucket to say whether the law should or should not apply to Mr. Norton's activities," said RI ACLU Director Steve Brown. "We do agree that people engaged in general advocacy as individual citizens have a First Amendment right to speak out on public issues without needing to register with the government."

"It is worth noting that the Secretary of State made an effort this year to simplify the lobbying statute, and legislation she introduced would have clarified that only people receiving compensation for their work would be considered lobbyists, a limitation with which we strongly agree," continued Brown. "However, the legislation did not pass."

Pat Ford with the Coalition Radio, however, had strong remarks on the letters.

"This week, the civil rights abuse of ordinary Rhode Islanders has reached a new low, with the implied threat of Mr. Norton's classification as "Lobbyist". Given the selective nature of the mailing, it has become clear that this is a tool being used to silence citizen dissent," said Ford. "When asked by the Coalition if Mr. Steinberg, who has become (in)famous for his walking tours of the proposed Providence Stadium, had been similarly contacted, we were told by the Secretary of States Office that in fact, he had not, because of his role as a source of information for the public. Given the attendance of a variety of elected officials at his "Listening Tours", and as a representative of the investment group pursuing the stadium, this contention is tenuous at best."

"Anytime a citizen receives an unsolicited letter from a Government Agency, there is an undertone of intimidation, particularly when it becomes clear that the Agency, in this case, the Office of the Secretary of State, has been performing their own version of "Lobbyist-Stalking", staking out public events and social media for even the most basic levels of organization, in order to single out potential threats to the plans of the power elite," continued Ford. "The notion that Mr. Norton would become, by merely exercising his Constitutional Rights, a lobbyist, with all of the implied reporting requirements, is ludicrous. In a more temperate time, The State of Rhode Island enacted protection against "Slapp Lawsuits"  because of their direct threat to activists & whistleblowers freedom to organize. Is it time to bring to bear the same penalties upon our Elected Officials?"
 


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