Secrets and Scandals: Reforming Rhode Island 1986-2006, Chapter 42 (Cont.)

H. Philip West Jr.

Secrets and Scandals: Reforming Rhode Island 1986-2006, Chapter 42 (Cont.)

Gubernatorial candidate Tony Pires stood with them, listening somberly. He told reporters about sixteen years as a representative, eight as chair of the House Finance Committee. “I understand the politics of the grant system,” he said. But it was inappropriate to use this “for leverage against Rep. Dennigan for her willingness to be independent on separation of powers.” 

Harwood’s chief of staff, former Rep. Frank J. Anzeveno Jr., watched from nearby and dismissed Dennigan’s complaint. “Shame on her,” he told reporter Edward Fitzpatrick, “I think it’s unfair, and she’s being political. The bottom line is that this has nothing to do with the separation of powers vote.” 

In addition to being deprived of legislative grants, Dennigan was fighting for her political life in a district gerrymandered to contain only a tiny fraction of her old turf. “They think they’re going to get rid of me by sticking me into a district where hardly anybody knows me,” she said. “Could I be paranoid for thinking they’re out to get me?” 

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A decade earlier, she had served on the Common Cause board and shaped proposals that finally won passage in the 1992 Campaign Finance Law. An emergency room nurse and mother of four energetic daughters, she had completed law school. She had won a seat in the House of Representatives in 1996 but now faced a fierce uphill fight to hold it.

Harwood seemed unassailable. With his wife ensconced in a lifetime magistrate appointment, he deflected ethics complaints, breezed through downsizing, gerrymandered districts, hijacked boards, crushed separation of powers, swatted away vetoes, and overpowered the Senate. I understood why even Sheldon Whitehouse needed his support. Had we been naive to imagine that a perfect storm would engulf John Harwood? 

 

H. Philip West Jr. served from 1988 to 2006 as executive director of Common Cause Rhode Island. SECRETS & SCANDALS: Reforming Rhode Island, 1986-2006, chronicles major government reforms during those years.

He helped organize coalitions that led in passage of dozens of ethics and open government laws and five major amendments to the Rhode Island Constitution, including the 2004 Separation of Powers Amendment.

West hosted many delegations from the U.S. State Department’s International Visitor Leadership Program that came to learn about ethics and separation of powers. In 2000, he addressed a conference on government ethics laws in Tver, Russia. After retiring from Common Cause, he taught Ethics in Public Administration to graduate students at the University of Rhode Island.

Previously, West served as pastor of United Methodist churches and ran a settlement house on the Bowery in New York City. He helped with the delivery of medicines to victims of the South African-sponsored civil war in Mozambique and later assisted people displaced by Liberia’s civil war. He has been involved in developing affordable housing, day care centers, and other community services in New York, Connecticut, and Rhode Island.

West graduated, Phi Beta Kappa, from Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y., received his masters degree from Union Theological Seminary in New York City, and published biblical research he completed at Cambridge University in England. In 2007, he received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from Rhode Island College.

Since 1965 he has been married to Anne Grant, an Emmy Award-winning writer, a nonprofit executive, and retired United Methodist pastor. They live in Providence and have two grown sons, including cover illustrator Lars Grant-West. 

This electronic version of SECRETS & SCANDALS: Reforming Rhode Island, 1986-2006 omits notes, which fill 92 pages in the printed text.


Rhode Island's History of Political Corruption

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