Protesters Oppose 38 Studios Bailout, Demand Accountability
Thursday, May 29, 2014
GoLocalProv Politics Team and Jack Andrade
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Protesters gather outside the State hous
Politicians, citizens, and leaders of special interest groups joined together today and staged a protest outside the State House.
Speaker Nicholas Mattiello recently came out in support of paying back the bonds remaining from the 38 Studios deal, and opponents of the bailout are demanding accountability to fall on those who brokered the deal, not the taxpayers.
Proponents of paying back the $87 million remaining debt, including Speaker Mattiello, have said protecting the state’s credit rating is necessary to avoid being alienated by future investors. Protesters outside the Statehouse voiced their disagreement.
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“The state of Rhode Island, as I see it, is sitting at a kitchen table with a pair of scissors in one hand and a credit card in the other,” said Democratic Representative Spencer Dickinson of South Kingstown. “I’ll tell you what I’m going to do…I’m going to cut the credit card.”
Christopher Curry of moveon.org argued for establishing a state-owned bank similar to the one in North Dakota.
“Those guys on Wall Street will retaliate? Well screw them. We’ll finance our own loans with our own money,” Currie said.
Other groups represented at the protest included the Tea Party, the Libertarian Party, and the Green Party. Occupy Providence organized the protest.
Related Slideshow: Who Wants to Pay and Who Wants to Default on the 38 Studios’ Bonds
GoLocalProv showcases which Rhode Island politicians and organizations want to pay or default on the 38 Studios' Bonds.
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Allan Fung
Republican candidate for Governor
“I am repeating my opposition to the 38 Studios loan guaranty and to the use of taxpayer dollars to repay those moral obligation bonds.”
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Ken Block
Republican candidate for Governor
“38 Studios was a bad deal and a bad investment from the very beginning and now Rhode Island taxpayers are being asked to take the hit for bondholders who should have known better...As long as there are serious legal questions still to be decided, we need to stop the repayment process."
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RIPEC
John Simmons, executive director of the Rhode Island Public Expenditure Council
“We’re not going to punish anybody but ourselves if we don’t pay."
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Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce
Laurie White, President of Chamber of Commerce
“I think it’s important that action occur quickly. Our view is that economic development in Rhode Island has to be the main event. … We need a very dramatic, aggressive effort to change the path that we’re on.”
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Gina Raimondo
Democratic candidate for Governor
“Despite my frustration with everything surrounding this transaction, I believe it is in the best long-term interest of the state and all taxpayers to repay these bonds."
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Clay Pell
Democratic candidate for Governor
“Clay does not believe Rhode Island should default on its moral obligation bonds when they come due. 38 Studios was a terrible mistake — and another example of why we need to change the culture of politics in Rhode Island"-Devin Driscol.
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Angel Taveras
Democratic candidate for Governor
“While I share the frustration of many Rhode Islanders, I believe that not paying back 38 Studios bondholders would have a detrimental impact on the state’s bond rating that would far outweigh any short-term benefit we might gain. We cannot afford to default on our obligations.”
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Lincoln Chafee
Governor of Rhode Island
“The candidates who can’t understand these two obvious truths are unfit to be Governor. The consequences of default would place Rhode Island as one of the lowest state bond ratings in the nation, and the industry would reduce Rhode Island to ‘junk bond’ status. We have been told in no uncertain terms that the reaction to not paying our debt obligations will be severe and have an adverse impact on Rhode Island. In addition, failure to honor our obligations could have harmful effects on the pending lawsuit.”
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Mike Stenhouse, CEO of RI Center for Freedom and Prosperity
"It's not just about not paying off bondholders. Bondholders are adults, they knew the risk. It's not just a question of the credit agencies. It's a question of what would payment crowd out, what reforms could we achieve with that money, such as sales tax reform, which would enable us to create jobs."
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Mike Riley
2012 Republican candidate for the 2nd Congressional District of Rhode Island.
"If we had a real Governor, he would stand up for the Taxpayers and the State of Rhode Island and stand up against threats by rating agencies."
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Professor Ed Mazze
Professor of business at University of Rhode Island
"Even though this is a moral obligation in terms of the way the financial deal is set up I still feel the state has an obligation to the bondholders, to make good on their payments."
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