{"id":1588,"date":"2014-11-08T03:34:41","date_gmt":"2014-11-08T07:34:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?p=1588"},"modified":"2014-11-26T03:06:54","modified_gmt":"2014-11-26T07:06:54","slug":"post-mortem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?p=1588","title":{"rendered":"Post-Mortem: Rhode Island&#8217;s Nov. 4, 2014 Referendum to Convene a State Constitutional Convention"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>On November 4, 2014, the referendum to convene a Rhode Island state constitutional convention lost by 55.1% to 44.9%.\u00a0 On October 23, Brown University\u2019s Taubman Center published a poll, the results of which were reported in the <em>Providence Journal<\/em> and <em>Governing Magazine<\/em>, finding that 42.3% of voters were in favor of a constitutional convention, 26.8% opposed, and 30.9% undecided.<\/p>\n<p>Absentee ballots ran 50.1% opposed and 49.9% in favor, which suggests that the yes forces lost about 10% of the vote during the last few days of the campaign.\u00a0\u00a0 Although it cannot be assumed that absentee ballots were necessarily representative of the larger voting public or that the poll was competently conducted, the drop-off is consistent with the experience of Rhode Island in 2004 and Connecticut in 2008, where there was a similar drop-off as the no campaign got into high gear and voters focused on the issue in the days before the election.<\/p>\n<p>Voting in support of the referendum <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/wp-content\/uploads\/2014\/11\/2014-11-05-TownByTownElectionResultsForQuestion3OnTheConConReferendum-AsReportedInTheProvidenceJournal.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">ranged<\/a> from a high of 55.1% in Central Falls to a low of 38.0% in Burrilville. \u00a0Central Falls is best know for its bankruptcy resulting from unfunded public pension liabilities. \u00a0Burrilville is represented in the Rhode Island House by Cale Keable, who supervised the drafting of\u00a0the constitutionally mandated <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=1069\" target=\"_blank\">Bi-Partisan Preparatory Commission Report<\/a> on the constitutional convention referendum and was <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=1194\" target=\"_blank\">strongly opposed<\/a> to convening a convention.<\/p>\n<p>Although the referendum lost, the yes vote at 44.9%\u00a0was the second highest yes percentage of the eleven \u00a0state constitutional convention referendums held in the U.S. during the past decade (2005-2014). \u00a0The only one that received a higher yes percentage vote was in Maryland in 2010.<\/p>\n<p>What explains the outcome? \u00a0Although one might just as well explain why it did so well in the face of a much better financed opposition backed by Rhode Island government media (notably, Rhode Island&#8217;s <em>2014 Voter Information Handbook<\/em>), I will here attempt to explain why it lost.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Economic and political satisfaction with the status quo<\/strong><br \/>\nIn recent years, Rhode Island newspapers were full of articles noting Rhode Island\u2019s history of corruption, its structural budget deficits, its declining population growth, its failure to keep up economically with adjacent states, and, most importantly, high unemployment (currently among the top three states in unemployment in the U.S. and after the 2008 recession in the number one spot).\u00a0 This was reflected in opinion polls indicating very high unhappiness with government. \u00a0I compiled a few of the articles <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=731\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>But this did not translate itself into a desire for political change.\u00a0 Most state legislators ran <a href=\"http:\/\/www.providencejournal.com\/opinion\/commentary\/20140921-ed-oneill-shocking-52-of-assembly-unopposed.ece\" target=\"_blank\">unopposed<\/a> in the general election and there was minimal legislative turnover.\u00a0 All state offices remained in democratic control.\u00a0 Voting <a href=\"http:\/\/www.providencejournal.com\/politics\/content\/20141105-r.i.-voter-turnout-down-substantially-in-2014-election.ece\" target=\"_blank\">turnout was 40.1%<\/a>, among the lowest in the United States.\u00a0 With such apparent satisfaction with government, it was arguably no surprise that the constitutional convention referendum was defeated.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The referendum\u2019s partisan perception<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The constitutional convention referendum took on a partisan color, despite the efforts of the three leaders of RenewRI, the coalition in favor of a yes vote.\u00a0 The three leaders were Gary Sasse, director of the Hassenfeld Institute for Public Leadership at Bryant University and a long-time Rhode Island government administrator, Phil West, the former long-time executive director of Rhode Island Common Cause, and Robert Flanders, a retired Rhode Island Supreme Court judge, who had been appointed by a Republican governor.<\/p>\n<p>Rhode Island is an overwhelmingly Democratic state.\u00a0 For example, 69 of 75 Rhode Island House legislators were Democrats.\u00a0 But surprisingly, the largest voting block was independents, and the sitting governor was elected as an independent (although he then switched to becoming a Democrat).\u00a0 In 2014, the \u201cModerate Party\u201d won more than 20% of the gubernatorial vote, spending only $35.31, not accepting contributions, and relying on free social media (see October 7, 2014 <a href=\"https:\/\/secure.ricampaignfinance.com\/RhodeIslandCF\/Candidate\/FilingAmendmentSelect.aspx?X=T&amp;FilingID=140624&amp;FormName=RICF2\" target=\"_blank\">filing<\/a>).<\/p>\n<p>Despite the attempts of the yes campaign to have a non-partisan aura, there were three factors that worked against this.\u00a0 First, the no coalition was essentially the Rhode Island progressive coalition repurposed to oppose a constitutional convention.\u00a0 The yes coalition was clearly to the right of that, even if it had some bona fide progressives among its members.<\/p>\n<p>Second, all the statewide Republican candidates supported a yes vote (that is, the candidates for governor, lieutenant governor, secretary of state, and attorney general) while only the Democratic candidate for lieutenant governor supported a yes vote.\u00a0 However, none of the candidates made a big deal about the constitutional convention referendum either for or against.\u00a0 The context for their positions on the issue was dutifully answering when moderators in TV debates asked them point blank whether they supported or opposed a yes vote on the question.\u00a0 The exception was Ken Block, a Republican candidate for governor, who\u00a0lost in the primary. \u00a0After Ken Block&#8217;s a primary opponent spoke out in favor of a\u00a0constitutional convention and thus took away the issue, he deemphasized\u00a0the issue for the duration of his primary campaign.<\/p>\n<p>Third, and arguably most important, they painted the Rhode Island Center for Freedom &amp; Prosperity and one of its speakers, Grover Norquist, as the face of the opposition.\u00a0 Mike Stenhouse, the head of the Rhode Island Center for Freedom &amp; Prosperity, was an avid supporter of convening a constitutional convention and early on, as an individual rather than representative of an institution, was a member of RenewRI.\u00a0 He invited Grover Norquist to speak in favor of a constitutional convention at one of his events and this got great publicity, with the no coalition convening a TV press conference at the entrance to the event.\u00a0 This fit perfectly into one of the no coalition\u2019s major themes, which was that a state constitutional convention would be dominated by wealthy, out-of-state special interest groups.\u00a0 It wasn\u2019t so much that either Stenhouse or Norquist was repeatedly cited after the initial PR blitz as that they provided a rationale for an advertising campaign that would otherwise have been on very shaky empirical grounds.\u00a0 Norquist was, after all, a bonafide wealthy, out-of-state, highly conservative interest.<\/p>\n<p>During most recent constitutional convention referendums, the no coalition has found some organization that is widely viewed as extremist and then\u00a0heavily promoted it as\u00a0the face of the opposition.\u00a0 An organization willing to take on this role as bogeyman for the no coalition can win hundreds of thousands of dollars\u2019 worth of free publicity.\u00a0 Usually the winner of that largess\u00a0has been a group promoting conservative social values in a state, such as Rhode Island, that does not have conservative social values.\u00a0 But in Rhode Island, no conservative social group was willing to step forward to win that bounty of free publicity.\u00a0 Moreover, Rhode Island\u2019s bishop <a href=\"http:\/\/wpri.com\/2014\/10\/27\/bishop-takes-abortion-off-the-table-for-convention\/\" target=\"_blank\">announced<\/a> that he would not support promoting a pro-life agenda at a state constitutional convention.\u00a0 In that vacuum stepped Rhode Island\u2019s Center for Freedom &amp; Prosperity and Grover Norquist.<\/p>\n<p>In comparison, RenewRI got relatively little free publicity from the no coalition, even though the press accepted RenewRI as the spokesperson for the yes coalition.\u00a0 The no campaign\u2019s refusal to publicize RenewRI may have been more a testament to its perceived strength rather than its weakness.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Secretary of State\u2019s highly biased 2014 Voter Information Handbook<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>In Rhode Island, the Secretary of State drafts a voter information handbook that explains every referendum on the ballot and then mails it to every voter about a month before the election.\u00a0 The Secretary of State <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?p=1333\" target=\"_blank\">secretly<\/a> farmed out the drafting of the constitutional convention explanation to the General Assembly\u2019s leadership, which was adamantly opposed to convening a constitutional convention.\u00a0 The result was an explanation that highlighted the costs but not the benefits of voting yes for a state constitutional convention.<\/p>\n<p>Voters heavily rely on the voter information handbook to understand what the more obscure bond referendums are about.\u00a0 Given that most voters have very little understanding what a constitutional convention is about, they may have been unusually influenced by the Secretary of State\u2019s highly unfavorable but cleverly disguised cost-benefit analysis.<\/p>\n<p>Some news outlets also\u00a0heavily relied on the explanations in the 2014 Voter Information Handbook in their referendum guides. \u00a0For example, the day before the\u00a0November 4, 2014 election, radio station WBOB ran a segment:\u00a0<a href=\"http:\/\/www.990wbob.com\/news--politics\/all-you-need-to-know-about-ris-2014-ballot-questions\" target=\"_blank\">All You Need To Know About RI&#8217;s 2014 Ballot Questions<\/a>, which included a description of the state constitutional convention referendum that was copied\u00a0from the Handbook.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Secretary of State\u2019s numbering of the constitutional convention question<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The Secretary of State gave the constitutional convention question the number #3.\u00a0 This was highly significant because in neighboring Massachusetts, which overlaps the Rhode Island media market, reject question #3 was the most heavily advertised item on the ballot and one of the most expensive in the entire United States.\u00a0 Question #3 asked voters if they wanted to ban casinos in Massachusetts, which were approved in another referendum in 2011.\u00a0 Blue chip casino companies, including MGM Resorts, Penn National Gaming, and Wynn Resorts, had announced plans to invest billions of dollars in Massachusetts casinos if the voters voted to reject Question #3.\u00a0 <a href=\"http:\/\/www.masslive.com\/politics\/index.ssf\/2014\/11\/pro-and-anti-casino_coalitions.html\">Gambling and labor interests<\/a> spent <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bostonglobe.com\/business\/2014\/11\/05\/election-night-other-winners-and-losers\/VwGpUNVsqLUyj3urPR40aI\/story.html\">$12.1 million dollars<\/a>\u00a0to oppose question #3, mostly spent on broadcast media, some of which reached Rhode Island (the vote no campaign includes links to <a href=\"http:\/\/www.protectmassjobs.com\/videos\/\">29 thirty to sixty second vote on 3 advocacy ads<\/a>).\u00a0 That was about 250 times the amount spent on the yes campaign in Rhode Island (and more than has ever been spent on a Rhode Island referendum, which was <a href=\"http:\/\/www.bostonglobe.com\/metro\/2014\/11\/04\/casino-repeal-effort-before-mass-voters-tuesday\/zZlqoPzFxatWE6SXJXuKRN\/story.html\" target=\"_blank\">$12 million<\/a>\u00a0in 2006 for another gambling referendum). Supporters of the Massachusetts gambling referendum in 2014 spent $582,334, less than 5% as much as the no campaign.\u00a0 More than 20 local unions also contributed grassroots support, including placement of \u201cVote \u2018No\u2019 on 3\u201d signs. In addition to gambling interests anticipating hundreds of millions of dollars a year of profits from the casinos, public employee labor interests anticipated equivalent amounts a year in extra tax revenue. \u00a0Massachusetts receives 25% to 49% of the casino revenue.\u00a0 The Massachusetts question #3 was defeated at the polls <a href=\"http:\/\/ballotpedia.org\/Massachusetts_Casino_Repeal_Initiative,_Question_3_(2014)\">60.1% to 39.9%<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>Many Rhode Islanders drive on roads where they would have seen the Massachusetts \u201cVote No on Question 3\u201d signs.\u00a0 Others would have heard the Massachusetts TV and radio stations filled with Vote No on Question 3 commercials.<\/p>\n<p>Given the sophisticated political operatives involved in the drafting of the constitutional convention question and that those operatives could not possibly have missed the casino referendum in Massachusetts, it&#8217;s hard to believe that they did not take into consideration the \u00a0implications of choosing number 3 for the constitutional convention referendum.<\/p>\n<p>Moreover, there was a second reason for giving the constitutional convention referendum the number 3.\u00a0 Rhode Island\u2019s legislative leadership wanted to expand gambling in Rhode Island, partly out of fear from increased Massachusetts competition (Rhode Island and Massachusetts have been conducting a gambling arms race), and had placed two gambling questions on the ballot.\u00a0 Those ballot questions were given the numbers #1 and #2.\u00a0 Even if the operatives did not draw the link between Rhode Island\u2019s constitutional convention question and the Massachusetts gambling question, it is inconceivable that they would not have drawn a connection between the Massachusetts and Rhode Island gambling questions.\u00a0 Indeed, any Rhode Island gambling or labor lobbyist should have been fired on the spot if he allowed the industry\u2019s yes campaign in Rhode Island to be confused with its massive no campaign in neighboring Massachusetts.\u00a0 As soon as the Secretary of State publicly announced that the constitutional convention referendum would be given the number 3, the Coalition for Responsible Government rebranded itself as \u201cRejectQuestion3.com.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><strong>The logic of coalition politics and the no campaign\u2019s effective use of the social rights issue<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The no campaign harped continuously about the threat that a constitutional convention could pose to a women\u2019s right to choose.\u00a0 This was also the theme of a mailer sent by the Coalition for Responsible Government to a large fraction of Rhode Island women and widely received on Saturday, November 1, 2014, three days before the election.\u00a0 Although Planned Parenthood contributed less than 10% of the Coalition\u2019s funding, its logo was placed on the corner of the flyer.\u00a0 The five top contributors to the Coalition were also listed in small print, starting with Planned Parenthood.<\/p>\n<p>This was a striking question to highlight.\u00a0 In early June, 2014, Planned Parenthood conducted a poll saying that 93% of Rhode Islanders supported a women\u2019s right to choose.\u00a0 It then widely distributed these findings to candidates for the General Assembly.\u00a0 The language it used to publicize its findings was: \u201cOverwhelmingly, Rhode Islanders think it\u2019s important for women in Rhode Island to have access to all of their reproductive health care options available to them, including abortion (93%).\u201d The overall grassroots strategy was to demonstrate that there was overwhelming popular support for a women\u2019s right to choose so that proposing legislation curtailing a women\u2019s right to choose would be a losing proposition.<\/p>\n<p>If the goal of the Coalition for Responsible Government was truly to protect minority rights, this was the absolutely wrong issue to choose because it was so popular.\u00a0\u00a0 Same-sex marriage would have been much better because it only had about 55% support.\u00a0 Certain unpopular rights for felons would have been even more consistent with the rhetoric about protecting minority civil rights.\u00a0 But from another perspective, picking a women\u2019s right to choose as an endangered right was brilliant.\u00a0 Since it was overwhelmingly popular in Rhode Island, it wouldn\u2019t lose any votes.<\/p>\n<p>Still, the issue seemed to be problematic for Planned Parenthood Rhode Island\u2019s overall legislative strategy, which was led by the former political director of the National Education Association\u2019s Missouri state chapter.\u00a0 From March 2014 through the November 2014 election, the leadership of Planned Parenthood supported the Coalition for Responsible Politics opposing a no vote.\u00a0 But, unlike other issues, it didn\u2019t promote this issue on its website and promote it to its members via action alerts.<\/p>\n<p>No right-to-life group appeared saying that it wanted a constitutional convention to pursue a right-to-life agenda, and Rhode Island\u2019s bishop publicly announced that he wouldn\u2019t support introducing social issues to the agenda of a constitutional convention.\u00a0\u00a0 This was contrary to the Catholic Church\u2019s position in 1986, when it aggressively pursued a right-to-life agenda and successfully got the convention convened that year to propose it as the last of fourteen proposed referendums, which was then defeated by more than 2:1 against (67% to 33%).\u00a0\u00a0 Since then, public opinion in Rhode Island had become even more staunchly pro-choice.<\/p>\n<p>My explanation of the politics driving this campaign is as follows: The unions, primarily the public employee unions, were the primary force driving the no campaign, as they also were in Rhode Island in 2004, Connecticut in 2008, and Illinois in 2008\u2014all states where polls indicated the yes campaign could win.\u00a0 They were genuinely fearful of a constitutional convention and for that reason knew that they couldn\u2019t be the public face of the no campaign.\u00a0\u00a0 It was time for them to cash in their chits with their coalition partners, and that is what they did.<\/p>\n<p>Interest group politics is largely about you scratch-my-back, I\u2019ll scratch-your-back coalitions because an individual group is far less effective acting on its own.\u00a0 All over the country Planned Parenthood is part of the progressive coalition that includes labor unions, the ACLU, gay and lesbian rights groups, and the NAACP.\u00a0 These groups know they need each other\u2019s support in order to have the critical support needed to win on the issues critically important to them.\u00a0 They won\u2019t compromise their values on those issues, but on secondary issues they are happy to oblige their coalition partners.\u00a0 It\u2019s like a woman who has an abusive husband but defends him because she knows she is better off having an abusive husband who earns a good living and helps with the children than being a single mother.\u00a0 And even if she felt she might be better off leaving her husband, she might recognize that her kids would be worse off, so for their sake she stays in the relationship.\u00a0 Both the Democratic and Republican parties are constituted of many such coalitions, and so was the progressive coalition that was activated in the Coalition for Responsible Government.<\/p>\n<p>One cannot really prove such a conflict of interest on this particular issue.\u00a0 There isn\u2019t any money to follow (although unions do provide some money to their progressive allies; e.g., see <a href=\"http:\/\/hechingerreport.org\/content\/where-does-a-teachers-dues-check-go_11518\/\" target=\"_blank\">The Hechinger Report<\/a>).\u00a0 There is always some excuse to plausibly deny such a coalition motive, which, like the ubiquitous legislative process known as logrolling (where one legislator will support something he opposes to get something he supports), is widely perceived as dirty and embarrassing when publicly acknowledged.\u00a0 Still, this logic of coalition politics primarily explained why the most visible partners in the Coalition for Responsible Government weren\u2019t the main drivers and even appeared embarrassed to promote the issue to their members along with information (notably, the overwhelming support for a women\u2019s right to choose) that would have seemed so contradictory if placed side by side.<\/p>\n<p>Rhode Island\u2019s constitutional convention politics reminded me of a scene in the House of Cards TV series where U.S. Vice President Frank Underwood abandons his bill to protect raped women to win the favor of the U.S. House leader whose support he needs to preserve and increase his power, which was his larger goal.<\/p>\n<p>From a certain perspective, then, the fundamental tragedy of both good government and constitutional convention based reform is that there are always interest groups happy to sacrifice such reforms if it helps them pursue an issue they care much more about by allying themselves with the most powerful special interest groups who are in a position to help them pursue that issue.\u00a0 The problem occurs because the most powerful special interest groups will be intrinsically opposed to majoritarian and deliberative politics.\u00a0\u00a0 The problem is aggravated with constitutional conventions because, even for groups where good government is the issue, such referendums come around only once every decade or two and have little chance of passing&#8211;but needing allies in the legislature and among your coalition partners is a day-to-day life-and-death matter that must take precedence for the sake of your organization.\u00a0 That, in my opinion, has become the tragedy of state constitutional convention based reform in the United States.<\/p>\n<p><strong>RenewRI\u2019s crippling attempt at coalition politics<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>RenewRI was primarily focused on good government reform (such as legislative redistricting, ethics, and transparency, as well as enhancing the powers of the executive and judicial branches of government), but it made one exception.\u00a0 It supported the request of the Rhode Island Association of School Committees for more equitable state funding for low-income school districts.\u00a0 Like the Hassenfeld Institute, the Rhode Island Association of School Committees primarily exists to provide training to public officials.<\/p>\n<p>This coalition partner, while bringing some benefits, may have hurt RenewRI in two ways.\u00a0 First, it shifted the focus away from the democratic purpose of a constitutional convention and gave more credence to the argument that what RenewRI was hoping to accomplish could not only be done by the state legislature but done by it more inexpensively.<\/p>\n<p>Second, and more important, it made it difficult to respond in-kind to the no coalition\u2019s special interest funding arguments.\u00a0 The no campaign regularly alleged that both out-of-state and in-state special interests would dominate a constitutional convention.\u00a0 But the yes campaign refused to acknowledge the union interests, especially the public employee interests, which were the primary players behind the no campaign.\u00a0 This despite the fact that the unions were relatively unpopular in Rhode Island, and both Democratic and Republican candidates for office had sought to publicly distance themselves from them.\u00a0 The unions certainly knew about their relative unpopularity, as they sought to frame the debate in terms of social rather than economic rights.\u00a0 My guess is that RenewRI would not have been able to keep the Rhode Island Association of School Committees as a coalition partner if it had responded in-kind to the no campaign\u2019s attacks.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The portrayal of a constitutional convention as corrupt as the General Assembly<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The no campaign constantly harped on its <a href=\"http:\/\/ripr.org\/post\/political-roundtable-elorza-post-election-providence-raimondos-win-more\">allegation<\/a> that a constitutional convention would be as corrupt as the General Assembly, so why convene another body that would duplicate the ills of one that already existed.\u00a0\u00a0 General Assembly leaders echoed this argument, when they alleged that there was nothing a state constitutional convention could do that they couldn\u2019t do as well and with less expense to taxpayers.\u00a0 The yes campaign tried to respond to this argument by observing that a constitutional convention could merely propose amendments; citizens would have to approve them.\u00a0 But this was an inadequate response because the no campaign argued that the referendum process would be dominated by wealthy, out-of-state special interests.<\/p>\n<p>My guess is that the only effective response to this type of argument would have been to ridicule it by highlighting the fact that in Rhode Island and other states the funders of no campaigns have been a who\u2019s-who of special interest politics.\u00a0 If constitutional conventions could be so easily influenced by special interests, why would special interests be terrified of them?\u00a0 The <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.providencejournal.com\/opinion\/editorials\/20141021-yes-on-question-3.ece\">Providence Journal<\/a><\/em> and <em><a href=\"http:\/\/www.thewesterlysun.com\/news\/latestnews\/5883140-129\/editorial-time-to-reframe-question-no-3.html\">Westerly Sun<\/a><\/em> newspaper editorial writers incorporated this argument in their editorials. But, as described above, the yes campaign either didn\u2019t make it or didn\u2019t\u2019 make it effectively.<\/p>\n<p>The tactic of special interest groups attacking special interest groups reminds me of the classic definition of Chutzpah: \u201ca man who, having killed his mother and father, throws himself on the mercy of the court because he is an orphan.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps on no other issue concerning state constitutional conventions is Machiavellian politics more evident.\u00a0 The legislators and interest groups that oppose a constitutional convention on the grounds that they would control it tend to be the same legislators and interest groups that do everything in their power to bring about what they claim to oppose.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Asymmetric burden on the no campaign<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Wherever there is confusion about a ballot referendum, people will tend to vote no.\u00a0 To win, the no campaign does not have to make its own case, it just has to seed doubt about the other side\u2019s case.\u00a0 That creates an asymmetric burden on the yes campaign.<\/p>\n<p>The pervasive use of fear-mongering by no campaigns illustrates that they understand this political dynamic. Until American students learn about America&#8217;s state constitutional convention tradition in their high school and college American government classes, I don&#8217;t see this burden going away.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Academic indifference<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Various advocacy efforts concerning this referendum made highly questionable historical and scientific statements, but academics who specialize in political history and science were not asked by the press and did not provide it with their assessments of the veracity of those assertions.\u00a0 At one point, I devoted considerable effort to getting Brown University Emeritus Professor Gordon Wood to share his knowledge about the history of state constitutional conventions in American democracy.\u00a0 Wood is one of the foremost scholars of American political intellectual history during the late 18<sup>th<\/sup> and early 19<sup>th<\/sup> centuries and has written both authoritatively and favorably about the early implementations of this innovative American institution.\u00a0 However, Wood was writing a book and refused to get involved in any capacity.\u00a0 Alas, the vast majority of political scientists and election law experts know no more about state constitutional conventions than the average man on the street. But there were other contested issues where they have more expertise, including issues associated with direct democracy and public opinion on social issues, yet they still failed to share their knowledge with the public.\u00a0 Attempts to get several departments at Brown University to host a pro and con debate on the contested political history and science issues fell on deaf ears.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Arms race effect<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Ballot referendums have aspects of an information arms race: the greater the efforts of the yes campaign, the greater the efforts of the no campaign, so in this sense the yes campaign intrinsically backfired.<\/p>\n<p>Yes advocates won the newspaper opinion page war.\u00a0 The newspaper editorial pages, including in the most influential paper, the <em>Providence Journal<\/em>, were 100% in favor of a yes vote.\u00a0 The bulk of the opinion commentaries were also in favor of a yes.\u00a0 But what the no campaign lacked in diversity of authors it made up in publicity.\u00a0 The same negative op-eds tended to run in many if not all local newspapers in Rhode Island (a phenomenon I didn\u2019t even know was possible because I\u2019d been taught that newspaper opinion pages demanded exclusives).\u00a0 Perhaps most importantly, several of the op-eds were widely broadcast to the no coalition\u2019s grassroots supporters via social media, newsletters, and email\u2014often behind a members-only firewall.\u00a0 Certain narrowly targeted blogs that would otherwise have had no meaningful audience were also strategically broadcast to relevant audiences.<\/p>\n<p>As for the news pages, the yes and no campaigns received relatively little coverage compared to the high-profile races for governor and other statewide offices.\u00a0 Still, there was substantial coverage.\u00a0 But the coverage tended to report that the no campaign said a constitutional convention would endanger civil rights and be dominated by out-of-state special interests, while the yes campaign said it would enhance good government and could pass nothing into law without the approval of voters.\u00a0 The news pages made minimal attempts to evaluate the merits of either set of claims.<\/p>\n<p>In terms of reported campaign contributions, the yes campaign did far better than any other yes campaign in recent decades for a constitutional convention referendum viewed by opponents as one that might win.\u00a0 It reported about half as much in campaign contributions as the no campaign.\u00a0 But paid media is only a fraction of total media.\u00a0 The yes campaign received more free media on the newspaper opinion pages.\u00a0 But in terms of grassroots communications, which don\u2019t involve reported expenditures, it was completely outclassed by the no campaign.\u00a0 This reflected the nature of the memberships in the two types of coalitions.\u00a0 The yes coalition was made up of individuals, including many prominent individuals associated with good government reform.\u00a0 The no coalition was made up of groups, primarily labor groups, which were very well organized and had excellent mechanisms in place to communicate with their members.<\/p>\n<p>In terms of anonymous contributors, the no campaign had an intrinsic advantage because it got its funding from groups rather than individuals.\u00a0 For example, Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties Union receive substantial contributions from their labor union coalition partners.\u00a0 But campaign finance laws only require disclosure of the entity making a contribution to a ballot advocacy campaign, not the entity\u2019s individual supporters.\u00a0 This inherently favors any ballot advocacy campaign dominated by well-organized interest groups.\u00a0 Surprisingly, the opposite logic may apply to candidate campaign finance disclosure, where the opportunity for individuals and groups to hide behind other entities has become relatively easy.<\/p>\n<p>In terms of organization, the no campaign launched four months before the yes campaign (April 30, 2014 versus August 20, 2014) and merely had to activate its well established progressive coalition, whereas the yes campaign had to spend months trying to identify and organize good government enthusiasts.\u00a0 While many of those good government enthusiasts had a lot of political experience, they were not career government relations professionals.\u00a0 Nor did they have a fulltime, paid professional staff to orchestrate their campaign.\u00a0 They did, however, hire a competent political PR firm to orchestrate its published materials.<\/p>\n<p>Overall, the yes campaign won the war of the opinion elites, as reflected in the newspaper opinion pages.\u00a0 But the no campaign won the masses, as reflected in the final election results.\u00a0\u00a0 In this case, the two communities appeared to communicate relatively little with each other, perhaps reflecting the declining influence of newspapers.\u00a0 The effectiveness of the yes campaign with opinion elites may have merely mobilized and redoubled the efforts of both the General Assembly\u2019s leadership and the no campaign.\u00a0 This included the State of Rhode Island distributing at government expense to every Rhode Island voter a biased 2014 Voter Information Guide masquerading as an objective cost-benefit analysis, and the no coalition\u2019s implementation of a highly professional direct mail, grassroots, and broadcast media campaign.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Polling information on state constitutional convention issues is very poor. \u00a0It&#8217;s quite possible that the Brown University poll from Oct. 23 grossly understated the level of undecideds at 30.9%. \u00a0It is a well known polling phenomenon that voters will provide instant opinions to a pollster&#8217;s questions on issues they haven&#8217;t thought much about. \u00a0The impression I had is that as of Oct. 23 the vast majority of Rhode Islanders did not even know the most rudimentary facts about how a constitutional convention would work, let alone that it was on the ballot. \u00a0In contrast, a question about the gubernatorial race was much more likely to generate an informed and reliable response.<\/p>\n<p>I think that what is needed is a poll that tests voter knowledge of the basic history and mechanics of a constitutional convention. \u00a0How does the purpose of a constitutional convention differ from that of a legislature? \u00a0How are delegates to a constitutional convention chosen? \u00a0How do constitutional convention proposals become law? \u00a0What is the relationship between state and federal constitutional law? \u00a0How many constitutional conventions have been held in your state since its founding?<\/p>\n<p>Questions about basic \u00a0facts about the current constitutional convention question should also be asked. \u00a0For example, if voters don&#8217;t know the question is on the ballot, their views about whether they will vote for it should probably not be included in the poll results.\u00a0If they know the question is on the ballot, it should be asked where\u00a0they found out about it. \u00a0It should also be asked whether the information they have seen s generally positive and negative. \u00a0After they give their position on the poll, it should be asked what were the most important reasons for their position.<\/p>\n<p>It was my impression that Rhode Island&#8217;s yes coalition had little more than the vaguest idea what was actually in the heads of voters when they thought about voting to convene\u00a0a state constitutional convention. \u00a0This is a serious problem because even the most rudimentary knowledge cannot be presumed. \u00a0For example, with a gubernatorial, legislative, or judicial election, it can at least be presumed that voters (as well as the press, political scientists, and other opinion elites) know the basic functions of those branches of government.<\/p>\n<p>The lack of such rudimentary knowledge\u00a0means that a no coalition can paint almost any picture on the voter&#8217;s mental canvass about the nature of a state constitutional convention as an institution, let alone what it might do at a particular time and place in the future. \u00a0Until high school, college, and even Ph.D. level students of America Government\u00a0are taught about\u00a0the evolving history and purpose of America&#8217;s 233 state constitutional conventions since its founding, it&#8217;s hard to imagine this situation changing. \u00a0(Note:\u00a0this author received a Ph.D. in American Government from Northwestern University and, as a graduate student teaching assistant, taught introductory college level American Government.)<\/p>\n<p><em>Thanks to Beverly Clay, RhodeIslandConCon researcher, for contributing to the RhodeIslandConCon.info website during the past year and providing comments on\u00a0this post-mortem. \u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><em>This marks the expected last blog post on RhodeIslandConCon.info. \u00a0For any future information, please consult the companion website, <a href=\"http:\/\/concon.isolon.org\/\">The State Constitutional Convention Clearinghouse<\/a>. \u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n<p><strong>Highlights<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>For the advertising campaigns, click <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=46\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>For the news, click <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=1249\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>For the newspaper op-eds, click <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=148\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>For the newspaper editorials, click <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=44\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>For RhodeIslandConCon.info&#8217;s blog posts, click <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/?page_id=91\" target=\"_blank\">here<\/a>.<\/p>\n<p>For the major government milestones between placing the referendum on the ballot and announcing the election results, see\u00a0RhodeIslandConCon.info&#8217;s <a href=\"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/\" target=\"_blank\">home page<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>On November 4, 2014, the referendum to convene a Rhode Island state constitutional convention lost by 55.1% to 44.9%.\u00a0 On October 23, Brown University\u2019s Taubman Center published a poll, the results of which were reported in the Providence Journal and Governing Magazine, finding that 42.3% of voters were in favor of a constitutional convention, 26.8% [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"video","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"","_et_pb_old_content":"","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-1588","post","type-post","status-publish","format-video","hentry","category-blog","post_format-post-format-video"],"aioseo_notices":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1588","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1588"}],"version-history":[{"count":20,"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1588\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":1636,"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1588\/revisions\/1636"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1588"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1588"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/rhodeisland.concon.info\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1588"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}