In February, a poll conducted by
Brown University found that 74 percent of the
respondents thought Rhode Island is going in the wrong
direction. It was not exactly shocking news, given the
state’s ongoing budget deficits and the frequent state
of stalemate between Republican Governor Donald L.
Carcieri and the Democrat-controlled General
Assembly.
Could a Moderate Party of Rhode
Island, by operating from the center and focusing on the
state’s central issues, make the situation
better?
Ken Block thinks so. Block, a
Barrington resident who owns a Warwick software company,
says he’s long been frustrated by the shortcomings of
the local status quo, in which Republicans don’t offer a
viable alternative and legislative Democrats operate
with a lack of accountability. As a businessman with
elderly parents and school-age children, Block, a
self-described centrist, says neither party adequately
addresses his various concerns.
If his
nascent Moderate Party could pull enough people into the
center, he reasons, it could have an impact, helping to
put some pressure on the ruling
Democrats.
While efforts to develop third
parties have had little success amid America’s two-party
duopoly, a poll recently commissioned by Block, among
other results, found that 78 percent of the respondents
felt that neither major political party represents their
views on the way state government should be
run.
Seventy-four percent of the
respondents said they would be supportive of a new
moderate political party that was “not beholden to the
state’s labor unions and special interest of the left or
in lock step support of Republicans on the
right.”
The Moderate Party of Rhode Island
(moderate-ri.org) advocates the immediate adoption of
five core principles:
• Toughen ethics laws and employment agreements to make our elected, appointed and employed state officials far more accountable for their actions.
• Stop spending money that is not well spent.
• Induce businesses to locate to Rhode Island by bringing RI's business taxes in line with Massachusetts’ business taxes.
• Bring the total compensation packages (including wages, benefits, pension amounts and pension eligibility) for state employees in line with what private sector workers earn.
• Produce a balanced budget by
reducing spending and waste and by not relying on
one-time gimmicks like selling tobacco settlement funds
or revenue anticipation bonds.
Block says
he is focused on raising awareness about the Moderate
Party, attracting support from such individuals as
former attorney general Arlene Violet, and starting a
related political action committee. In time, he hopes to
establish the Mods as a state-sanctioned political
party, an effort that would require the gathering of a
number of signatures equal to five percent of the voting
in the last gubernatorial election.
With
2008 shaping up as in important political year in Rhode
Island, Block says he is encouraging people to run for
the General Assembly and to support the Moderate Party’s
goals, even if they identify as Republicans or
Democrats. “People in this state, we believe,” says
Block, “want an alternative.”
