RI HOUSE REPUBLICANS TO SKIP ANNUAL CHAMBER LEGISLATIVE LUNCH

 

State House, Providence, RI - House Republican Minority Leader Michael Chippendale has declined the usual annual invite to State House legislative leaders to sit on stage and take pre-planned questions at the Greater Providence Chamber of Commerce’s annual legislative luncheon on March 12, 2025. 

“I see no value in this event for anyone involved, legislators, attendees, or Chamber members,” said Chippendale.  “It is just a fundraiser for the Chamber and nothing more. It has simply proven to be a waste of time.”

“I sat on that stage for 6 years and realized it was just a dog and pony show,” echoed Representative and House Minority Leader Emeritus Brian Newberry. “The Chamber leadership has no interest in facilitating an actual debate.  They just want to cozy up to the Speaker and Senate President and throw them some pre-selected softball questions to make them look good. Try to speak out against something they don’t favor, as I did with truck tolls in 2016, and they cut you off. Why anyone bothers going is beyond me.”

“The Greater Providence Chamber is allegedly supposed to speak for the Rhode Island ‘business community’,” added Chippendale, “but the truth of the matter is that it is an incestuous group of top-level executives at the largest companies in the state, whose main goal is to not offend the Democratic leadership so they can get whatever legislative crumbs might get tossed their way. They certainly don’t represent the struggling small business community in the state, nor the general population, and they can always be counted on at election time to do the bidding of the Speaker and Senate President rather than support candidates who actually fight to help the overall business climate in Rhode Island.  I am done hoping they will change their ways and am no longer going to play their game.”

The rest of the House Republican Caucus will also skip the event this year. Many have jobs to attend to and better things to do with their time.  

President Trump claims deaths in the Russia-Ukraine war are under-reported. Speaking from the White House with the Irish Prime Minister, Trump once again said the war "never would have started" if he were President the last four years. Trump added "two-thousand people a week" are dying in the war and it has to end.        SpaceX is scrubbing tonight's launch to the International Space Station. A four person crew was scheduled to launch from Cape Canaveral Wednesday evening, but the mission was aborted about an hour before takeoff. The crew would have replaced two astronauts who have been aboard the ISS for over nine months.        The Vatican is encouraged after the results of the pope's chest x-rays. An update from the Holy See Press Office says x-rays taken on Wednesday "radiologically confirmed" Pope Francis' condition has improved. The pontiff's condition remains stable as he receives high-flow oxygen therapy during the day and non-invasive mechanical ventilation at night.        Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer says Democrats have the needed votes to block a Republican spending bill. This comes as Friday's deadline to avoid a government shutdown looms. The bill narrowly passed in the House yesterday by a vote of 217-to-213.        Pro-Palestinian Columbia University activist Mahmoud Khalil will remain in jail. Manhattan Federal Judge Jesse Furman has ruled that Khalil will remain held in Louisiana while he weighs further arguments in the deportation case. Khalil, a green card holder, was arrested at his Columbia-owned apartment Saturday night by ICE agents.        A measles outbreak that started in West Texas has now spread to two other states. The latest cases are in neighboring Oklahoma. The health department says they have identified two patients.