Bishop: Revolutionary Providence Primaries

Brian Bishop, GoLocalProv Guest MINDSETTER™

Bishop: Revolutionary Providence Primaries

Many are watching General Assembly races in November for a hint of change after the current leadership in the House and Senate forced through tolls in an obvious display of the muscle of the tin-eared status quo -- more interested in responsiveness to its crony constituencies than the citizens.

The movement for change hasn’t focused quite as much on primaries. And, to the extent it is associated with those exurban revolutionaries in the tea party, it hasn’t focused on the possibility that positive change could come in Providence – where the primary is the election!

GoLocalProv.com recognized three significant primary races in Providence: De Los Santos vs. Ciccone, Ranglin-Vassell vs. DeSimone and Gazdacko vs. Williams. But they missed an equally competitive and compelling primary that is perhaps even more revolutionary, because it doesn’t fit either the Italian old guard vs. people of color or the progressive vs. conservative Democrat molds: Quezada vs. Pichardo.

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This race is better epitomized in the district by the almost Randian campaign slogan: “Who is Ana Q”. Imagine the surprise of observers when this query was dragged through the air behind a plane just as Quezada’s camp stunned the political scene by working to submit 250 absentee ballot applications, the quintessential indication of ground work and support in these races.

Indeed, who is Ana Q? She is an empirical progressive, one who wants change that works. But, she can’t understand if we all use IDs for various business, public and private, why it is a problem to use ID when voting. She prefaces her concern for keeping guns out of the hands of people who shouldn’t have them with a concern for keeping them in the hands of law abiding citizens. Despite a myriad of progressive positions on education and community development, her mixed views had the Progressive Democrats take a pass on her race, which is suddenly looking like one to watch.

And of course she is skeptical of the tolls, expressing the fear that the increased costs of trucking goods will trickle up from her constituents, another regressive tax in disguise. This is a post partisan race. She and the team gathered around her candidacy are concerned about their neighborhood, not about rubber stamping views imposed from outside the neighborhood which has become the habit of her opponent Juan Pichardo who, as a member of leadership, necessarily had to vote enthusiastically for tolls and other leadership priorities but has yet to offer a message of what his leadership role has actually brought to the neighborhood.

We know, of course, what Frank Ciccone wants for his neighborhood, leaf police. A recent independent youtube video (SEE BELOW) chronicles his history of using public office to settle private vendettas. It should be scary enough that he managed to get a bill criminalizing blowing leaves past the Senate, but he also took on unmanned parking lots -- one of the great problems of our nation, and apparently flexed his credentials to try to squelch DUI charges against an associate. And like the rest of the status quo, he threw his toll vote in the face of his constituents, daring them to unelect him. We can only hope they realize that Doris De Los Santos, who opposes the tolls, is on the verge of doing just that.

A New Era

Is this a new era? It used to be that we wrote off Providence elections as belonging to the ward committees and the status quo, themselves a reflection of the racial makeup of the district involved. And we assumed that Providence election issues were always the amount of taxes flowing into the district from state coffers, as opposed to concern about the amount of taxes being collected from constituents. Not necessarily so anymore.

It was the unity of urban progressives and the tax conscious exurban right that defeated the Providence Pawsox Stadium. We are starting to find alignment between efforts to reign in the budget and meet the needs of the people of Providence (as opposed to the needs of the developers Providence).

This informal urban / exurban coalition could be the one to defeat the status quo when it comes to pouring a billion dollars into a ‘Big Dig’ in Rhode Island, DOTs proposed ‘solution’ to the decaying 6/10 connector.  The level of proposed spending is sadly inverse to imaginative thinking and neighborhood engagement. Olneyville and Silver Lake were solidly white immigrant communities when they were severed by the 6/10 connnector. Those marching at city hall for neighborhood issues in historic pictures projected at the city workshop on the 6/10 connector this week didn’t look like radicals, they looked like Italian housewives.

Of course our country is still divided ethnically and racially which is actually natural and instinctive. But it’s what we have (and hope for) in common that helps us to see beyond our tribe and embrace each other as citizens in common. That is another peculiarity of the Who is Ana Q campaign.

Lifelong and well known southsider from the black political caucus, Joe Buck, is crossing racial lines to support the Quezada campaign. Is this a new normal? In a neighborhood where primaries often break down along racial lines and where blacks might be expected to stay home if there is no black candidate, Joe says he considers not a candidate’s race, but his estimate of the sincerity of their promises to this challenged neighborhood.

And African American candidate Marcia Ranglin Vassell is not running your typical people of color vs. the establishment campaign in her race against Majority Leader John DeSimone. Rather her campaign takes aim at cronyism and insider dealing – a regular tea party campaign but for her economically liberal outlook. Still, if she is successful, it is easy to envision her working effectively with economic conservatives against crony capitalism. Do you think you are going to get that from the current house leadership? A new dawn could be here as early as September 13th. 

 

Brian Bishop is on the board of OSTPA and has spent 20 years of activism protecting property rights, fighting overregulation and perverse incentives in tax policy. 
 

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