Whitcomb: Renaissance of the Lunch Pail Democrats? RI Race; Trump Right to Block Broadcom

Robert Whitcomb, Columnist

Whitcomb: Renaissance of the Lunch Pail Democrats? RI Race; Trump Right to Block Broadcom

Robert Whitcomb
“Despite all the doom and gloom from the economic pessimistas, the resilient U.S. economy continues moving ahead,”  and pessimistic forecasters will “wind up with egg on their faces.”

--TV  personality and supply-side economics lover Larry Kudlow, President  Trump’s choice to be his new economic adviser, writing for National Review on Dec. 7, 2007, a few months before the Great Crash of 2008.

 

GET THE LATEST BREAKING NEWS HERE -- SIGN UP FOR GOLOCAL FREE DAILY EBLAST

“Those who feel left behind by the enrichment of the minority and the stagnation of the many are choosing to be represented by political forces that cannot give them what they need, and will likely make their lives worse….

“{N}either the  {right-wing} populists nor the far-left have shown evidence they understand, or can govern in, a world as relentlessly globalizing as ours. Until a robust liberalism, shorn of pretension, can reconnect with knowledge and experience of working peoples’ lives, the populists will remain…popular.’’

--  John Lloyd,  a contributing editor at the Financial Times and the founder of FT Magazine.

 

After the inconvenience and dreariness of last Tuesday’s snowstorm, it was surprisingly lovely the next morning with a warm sun and trees draped in almost blindingly white snow. That’s New England, with some of the world’s worst weather and some of the best, often within 12 hours of each other. Big March snowstorms are very common in New England. See item at bottom.

 

xxx

 

Democrat Conor Lamb’s apparent victory in that intensely watched western Pennsylvania congressional race in a district that went for Trump by 20 points in 2016 displays what the Democrats need to win in many districts to take back the U.S. House in November. He eschewed the obsession with ethnic- and sexual-identity interests and focused on old-fashioned Democratic lunch-pail issues revolving around the protection of the social-safety-net programs of Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, strengthening unions’ rights to protect low-and-middle-income people in this very plutocratic period and rebuilding America’s crumbling infrastructure. (Bring back the WPA?!)

 

Mr. Lamb could not be called a member of the “Progressive Wing’’ of the Democratic Party. He’s what you might call a Truman Democrat.

 

He is socially centrist and economically realistic, in a broad tradition of the party that dates back to Franklin Roosevelt. No wonder that this  former Marine and ex-federal prosecutor (a good background from which to watch the sleaze of the Trump administration) was backed in his campaign by both the United Steelworkers and the United Mine Workers, many of whose members had voted for, and now realize that they were conned by, Trump.

 

Mr. Lamb also opposes abortion and major revisions of gun-control laws in the heavily Catholic and gun-owning district. And he approved of Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum, and is skeptical of the Dream Act.
 

He’s the sort of person who can win back many of those Rust Belt seats that were for many years held by Democrats.

 

Conor Lamb also says that Nancy Pelosi, of San Francisco, should retire as the Democrats’ House leader. Quite right! Ms. Pelosi is very smart but is too widely seen as a princess of the “Coastal Elite’’ and too obsessed with “identity’’ politics as represented, for example, by the push for gay marriage and expanded rights for illegal aliens. At 77, she needs to leave as soon as possible for the good of the party.

 

By focusing on New Dealish socio-economic themes that all Democrats and many independents would back, Democratic candidates can again win big time all over America.

 

xxx

 

Governor Gina Raimondo
Given that Rhode Island’s economy is generally doing better than it has for years (of course the booming global economy explains much of this), that her administration has not been touched by major scandal (yet) and that she is a very articulate and personable person (more apparent in small groups than in big ones or on TV), Rhode Island Gov. Gina Raimondo’s lack of popularity surprises me.

 

Some of this is probably Rhode Islanders’ traditional cynicism and distrust of politicians, fueled by past scandals and tribalism. Some of it may be due to the fact that her administration has run a program to attract businesses with tax and other incentives to move to the state, causing some resentment/envy among the businesses already here. I, too, have skepticism about “bribing’’ companies to move to Rhode Island with special deals, preferring to entirely recruit on the basis of the location, quality of the physical and educational infrastructure and that vague but important thing “quality of life.’’

 

But in the real world, all states wave goodies to lure companies. Maybe if the six New England states agreed not to get into bidding wars with each other it would cut down on tax-incentive brandishing: Promote the region as a whole.

 

(To read about Vermont’s controversial business incentive program, which may have negative lessons for other New England states, please hit this link:

 

And of course, she also has to deal with the fallout from the UHIP/Deloitte benefits-payments system disaster, variants of which happened in some other states, too.
 

But maybe her biggest problem is simply that many see her as a cool technocrat who doesn’t connect with them

 

Former Governor Lincoln Chafee
Former Sen. and Gov. Lincoln Chafee may run against Ms. Raimondo in the Democratic primary from the left, whose members are, as with the Tea Partiers on the right of the GOP, the most enthusiastic voters. As Richard Nixon, who tended to run from the right but govern in the center  or sometimes even center-left, famously put it in a conversation with John Whitaker, an aide:


“The trouble with far-right conservatives … is that they really don’t give a damn about people and the voters sense that. Yet any Republican presidential candidate can’t stray too far from the right-wingers because they can dominate a primary and are even more important in close general elections.”
 

“The far-right kooks are just like the nuts on the left. They’re door-bell ringers and balloon blowers and they turn out to vote.’’


 

xxx


Cranston Mayor and GOP hopeful Allan Fung
It seems likely that Cranston Mayor Allan Fung will be the Republican nominee for Rhode Island governor. He’s been a low-key and competent mayor, with minimal charisma. But his campaign so far seems to be based mostly on the fact that he’s not  Gina Raimondo. He will have to get more specific about what he’d do as governor. And  that will be difficult since Mr. Fung will have to try to avoid antagonizing the Tea Party/Trumpian base of the party that will want him to oppose all gun control and promise to slash taxes, however much that would mean slashing services and letting the state’s transportation and other public infrastructure become even more of an embarrassment.  

 

Meanwhile, the possible entrance into the gubernatorial race of former Rhode Island Secretary of State Matthew Brown as an independent would make things even more unpredictable. Mr. Brown, a smart guy and a good speaker with some charisma,  who has a national and indeed international perspective (like Ms. Raimondo), would run to the left of the governor, presumably siphoning off votes from her in the general election. In any event, they’d be fun to watch debating each other.

 

xxx
 

 

With what seems to be a long-term trend of well-known third-party gubernatorial candidates preventing any candidate from getting more than 50 percent of the vote in a general election in some states, including Rhode Island, it’s time for the states to have runoff elections between the two biggest vote-getters.

 

Many Americans would agree with Lee Drutman, writing in Vox:

 

“{A}  two-party system is inadequate to represent the diversity of public opinion. As a result, a lot of voters feel neither party represents them, even if they tend to vote one way or another. Note, for example, that the share of voters identifying as independents hit a record high (tie) of 46 percent in December 2017. The share of voters saying a third party is needed (because Republican and Democratic parties do not do an adequate job of representing the American people) hit a record high of 61 percent in Gallup’s most recent polling on the question.

“The most obvious benefit of ranked-choice voting is that voters can choose the candidate they most want to elect without having to worry so much about the ‘spoiler effect.’’’

 “{I}ndependents and third-party candidates could run without being spoilers, giving voters more choices and making for a more vibrant political debate.’’
 

To read Mr. Drutman’s article, please hit this link:

 

xxx

 

Let’s applaud the Trump administration’s decision to block Singapore-based Broadcom’s $117 billion bid to buy the U.S. chipmaker Qualcomm. National security would be jeopardized by letting Qualcomm’s patented products and other technology for making wireless chips fall into foreign hands. Its intellectual property is important in America ’s effort to maintain leadership in the next generation of high-speed mobile networks, essential in military and other national-security sectors.

 

The U.S. has friendly ties with Singapore. Still, China is relentlessly expanding its power in East and Southeast Asia, in part because of Trump’s stupid decision not to have the U.S. join the Trans-Pacific Partnership to help offset Chinese economic, political and military expansionism. Who’s to say that Broadcom might not end up selling Qualcomm technology to the Chinese? Or maybe Broadcom, known for penny-pinching, would have shrunken Qualcomm’s research and development budget, thus strengthening Chinese companies, which relentlessly steal U.S. intellectual property anyway, in the global marketplace.

xxx
 

Reminder to California and some other jurisdictions: Immigration policy is the province of the Feds only. No exceptions.

 

xxx

 

Colby College
Colby College, in Waterville, Maine, is setting a very happy example by planning to set up an arts (including film) center for the downtown of that old mill town, once more famous as the site of the Hathaway shirt factory than for the Colby campus. (Some readers may remember the national ads of the Hathaway shirt-clad man with an eyepatch.)

Colby and an outfit called Waterville Creates! Seek to raise up to $20 million to create the arts center to serve that area of central Maine. A former Colby trustee has already given $2 million for the project. I wish that more colleges and universities would launch such initiatives in their own communities.

 

xxx

 


It was exciting to read in the March 15 Providence Journal about the wind turbines to go up near the Rhode Island Central Landfill (“7 massive wind turbines taking root near landfill’’). The turbines, at 519 feet tall, will make Rhode Island that much less reliant on natural gas from outside the region, at a time when pipeline capacity into our region is strained, and act as dramatic advertisements for locally produced green energy. As some energy entrepreneurs have quipped, southeastern New England and its offshore waters are a “Saudi Arabia of windpower’’.

 

xxx

 

With recent storms and widespread power failures in eastern New England reminding us of the fragility of our regional electricity grid, many experts are looking at creating  more “microgrids.’’ Those are localized groups of electricity sources that normally operate connected to the traditional centralized electrical grid but can also be disconnected to "island mode"  and function autonomously. Of course, the storms are also leading many consumers to buy gas or diesel generators and/or to take the big step of installing their own green source of power – especially rooftop solar panels.

 

We’re unlikely to experience fewer storms in the future, and the tops of New England’s glorious big and heavily leafed  (for six months a year) deciduous trees are thick over many electrical lines. I doubt if the public would be willing to pay to bury them all!

 

xxx

 

Sometimes a city can take relatively simple and inexpensive measures to make itself more popular and prosperous. For example, it can improve its signage, clean up graffiti more quickly and punish the perpetrators – and turn more one-way streets into two-way streets.

 

The last has been generally shown to increase a city’s overall employment, reduce crime and accidents, boost the quantity and quality of housing (including hotels) and expand such sectors as food, entertainment, the arts and professional services.  

 

Now, some might complain that two-way streets make downtowns too crowded. But crowded cities are safer and more dynamic than less densely populated ones.  And those with lots of street life 24/7 are the best. That’s a good reason to replace as many surface parking lots as possible with buildings (even if they’re parking garages). The fewer gaps between buildings the better. For an interesting discussion of the pros and cons of two-way streets, read this CityLab piece, co-authored by Richard Florida, who has written a lot about downtown Providence, among other old cities:

 

xxx

 

Putin “has given up on winning respect through soft power and is pursuing what I call ‘dark power.’’’ His murders of foes represent “Putin’s own natural instincts that a great power is one that is feared. It is better and much easier to be feared than loved.’’

-- Mark Galeotti, a Russia expert at the Institute of International Relations in Prague, as quoted in The New York Times. Hit this link to read more:

 

President Donald Trump
The Trump circle’s sordid links with the murderous and kleptocratic regime of Vladimir Putin are obviously making it difficult to get the U.S fully engaged with its allies in pushing back against Trump’s favorite thug.  American rhetoric and actions have recently gotten a tad tougher but nowhere near what is needed. In her government’s tough response to Putin’s lethal and insidious physical attacks on his enemies on  British soil, Prime Minister Theresa May is setting an example of resolve for the whole Western Alliance,  an alliance that Trump has been busy undermining since he took office.

 

Tyrants only respect force. NATO must steel itself to confront the Russian threat to its security and to its democracy, threats that include the murder and attempted murder of Putin foes wherever they are; relentless attempts to damage the West’s electoral systems, and threats to militarily invade more European nations as it has already done to Ukraine.  And all this as we learn more about the extent of Russian cyber-penetration of our electrical and other infrastructure.

 

How sad that the president of the United States, who should be leading the pushback, is so corrupt and compromised, and has so little respect for the value of the Western Alliance, that leaders of smaller allies must take the lead.

 

Meanwhile, some in the Trump circle with past activity close to Putin regime might worry that unfortunate fatal “accidents’’ might befall them before they can talk at length with Robert Mueller’s investigation.

 

xxx

I have noticed over the past few weeks a hilariously large number of Russian names in the list of people wanting to “friend’’ me on Facebook. Presumably, the aim is for me to friend them and then they’d clog me with endless pro-Trump messages.

 

xxx

 

“Not until the close of the month do the chances of a twelve-inch snowstorm or a morning of zero cold diminish to a minimal percentage possibility. One needs only to recall the rugged month of March, 1956, when six storm systems crossed the region, and back to back snowstorms on March 17-18 and 20-21 paralyzed the Boston area on the traditional day of spring.’’

-- From the March chapter of New England Weather Book, by David Ketchum

 

I well remember the three feet of wet snow on the ground in Cohasset, Mass., in March 1956, after a mild winter with little snow.  The blooming crocuses were squashed. My mother was very unhappy that we couldn’t go to school for several days.


The 50 Greatest Living Rhode Islanders

Enjoy this post? Share it with others.