Raimondo Attack Ad on Fung’s Cranston Shows the Wrong City

Thursday, September 13, 2018

 

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Raimondo ad says Cranston, but actually it is Providence

Less than 24 hours after the polls closed and Governor Gina Raimondo’s campaign is already attacking Cranston Mayor Allan Fung’s record in Cranston.

Just one problem, the video scenes of “decaying Cranston” aren’t Cranston.

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Fung’s campaign says the scenes in the new: 30 commercial from Raimondo are actually of Providence.

“The beginning scenes are not in Cranston, they’re in Providence. Providence street signs are white and a different color per neighborhood, Cranston’s are green. Also, 24/7 Wall Street named Cranston as the best city to live in Rhode Island,” says Andrew Augustus of the Fung campaign.

No comment from the Raimondo campaign.

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2014 Ad about small business in RI was filmed in Ohio

In 2014, Fung Filmed a Small Business Ad in Ohio

As GoLocal first reported in 2014:

Republican gubernatorial candidate Allan Fung's latest campaign ad, "Open for Business," touts Fung's experience as Mayor of Cranston and vision for Rhode Island -- and based on photographic and campaign finance evidence, appears to have been shot in Columbus, Ohio.

Side by side comparisons of the diner in the ad to pictures of Tommy's Diner in Columbus look to confirm the campaign filmed the spot at the location in Ohio -- where the Fung campaign reported a second-quarter expenditure in 2014 of over $100,000 to the Ohio-based Strategy Group for "television ads."

"They opened up a restaurant, and before I could reach the counter, I worked along side them," said Fung of his parents' Rhode Island business in the ad, as the camera pans to him sitting at a diner counter -- making the case for the Ocean State being "open for business."

Photos of Tommy's Diner, which is thirty minutes to the south of the Strategy Group in Ohio, show the same red booths, chairs, photos on the wall, and art-deco chandeliers as seen in the background of the latest Fung ad.  READ THE REST OF THE STORY HERE.

 

Related Slideshow: RI 2018 Primary Night Winners and Losers

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WINNER: Gina Raimondo

Vultures had been circulating over the Governor’s head for the past couple of weeks with claims that the progressive movement in RI was picking up major steam.

Raimondo flexed her superior fundraising advantage and went negative on Matt Brown and punished him. At last count 56.2 percent to Brown’s 34.2 percent and Spencer Dickinson helping Raimondo with 9.6 percent.

At her celebration on Wednesday night, Raimondo gave a big “thank you” to Rhode Islanders for coming out to vote and she added that the people have spoken, and they want her to “Do more. Go faster. Keep going.”

Raimondo spent over $60 per vote in the primary.

She will run on the performance of the economy and look for Independent Joe Trillo to take votes away from  Cranston Mayor Allan Fung.

The Governor’s race has begun. Raimondo still has a reported $2.4 million cash-on-hand.

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WINNERS: Women Candidates

Across the state, women candidates won nearly every competitive local or statewide race.

From town councils to the governor's office, women candidates cleaned up.

The only high profile exception was in Senate District 30 in Warwick where challenger Mark McKenney took out progressive, Bernie Sanders-supporter and sitting State Senator Jeanine Calkin. McKenney won 54-46.

And, Patricia Morgan was defeated in the GOP gubernatorial primary.

Otherwise, women retained seats or seats went from male to female. The Providence City Council increases from five women members to eight with likely November wins by Helen Anthony (Ward 2), Kat Kerwin (Ward 12), and Rachel Miller (Ward 13).

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LOSER: Speaker of the House Nick Mattiello

Many of the Speaker’s targeted races turned into losses.

He pulled out all the stops to take out Smith Hill State Representative Moira Walsh and had his entire senior staff working primary day out of Patrick’s Pub on Smith Street trying to defeat Walsh.

The upstart reformer would have no part of it and at the last count beat Earnheart 55 to 45 percent.

In addition, Mattiello was on the losing side of Marcia Ranglin-Vassell, Walsh and more.

His win was Dan McKiernan in Providence in District 7 who won a narrow victory over Belen Flores 53.6 to 46.6 percent.

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WINNER: Allan Fung

Fung had the more difficult matchup than Raimondo.  He had to turn back House Minority Leader Patricia Morgan and he did with a comfortable margin.

Fung beat Morgan 56.4 percent to 40.1 percent. Former CEO of the defunct Benrus, Gio Feroce garnered just 3.5 percent.

Fung gets the Raimondo rematch that he wanted, but faces a number of new obstacles.

Fung needs the Republican Governor’s Association to support his campaign and make good on their $1.5 plus million commitment.

To beat Raimondo and not to get Bob Healey-ed again, he needs to convince the voters of Joe Trillo that a vote for Trillo is a vote for Raimondo.

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WINNER: Progressives Locally

Candidates who are strong on progressive Democratic ideals rang up win after win with few losses in the State House or in City Halls.

In Providence, progressive Sam Bell won-a-three way race and cobbled both long-time Senator Paul Jabour and Nick Autiello to capture Senate District 5.

Progressive Rebecca Kislak won House District 4.

And, in the City Council races, Helen Anthony won Ward 2 on the East Side and Rachel Miller won Ward 13 in a four-way race over Cyd McKenna, Leslie Papp, and Ray Beraducci.

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LOSERS: Progressives Statewide

Aaron Regunberg was tapped early as a candidate to watch nationally. CNN wrote in 2017 that the RI Lt. Governor’s race was one of nine Democratic primaries around the country to watch. The race did not disappoint in excitement, but in the end incumbent Dan McKee won re-election 51 to 49 percent.

Matt Brown rose from the proverbial political dead in RI and ran to the left of Gina Raimondo and pounded her on her faux pas — UHIP, and more.

But, in the end, for Brown the lack of money, Spencer Dickinson, and an in ability to convince Democrats that his vision is better for RI proved to be the downfall.

And, U.S. Senator Sheldon Whitehouse beat back progressive, peace candidate Pat Fontes.

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LOSER: Giovanni Feroce

Giovanni Feroce trumpeted his experience and vision as the differentiation in the Republican gubernatorial campaign.

But, the CEO of the recently failed Benrus was soundly rejected by GOP voters.

Feroce won just 3.5 percent of the primary vote — just 1,137 votes statewide.

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WINNER: Best Ad

Maybe no one had a better ad than Kobi Dennis, the Democratic candidate for Mayor of Providence. Dennis raised almost no campaign funds, but did offer up best ad — which featured him being tutored by a 9-year-old about the budget of the City of Providence.

SEE AD HERE

Dennis won 24 percent of the vote in a three-way loss to sitting Mayor Jorge Elorza.

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LOSER: No Debates

The no debaters both won their primaries. It may be the new vogue strategy, but it is bad for voters and Democracy.

Will the two 'no debaters' — Gina Raimondo (D) and Allan Fung (R)  — debate?

 

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