All posts by jvwalt

Behold the Lord High Executioner

Or so Vince Illuzzi pictures himself, upon the throne of the Auditor General: A personage of noble rank and file, a dignified and potent officer, whose functions are particularly vital.

Yesterday, I wrote about an Illuzzi comment that seemed to take a rather expansive view of the Auditor’s office: “It really is about looking at programs to see if they are performing as envisioned by the general assembly and as expected by the public…”

That, it seemed to me, outlined a policy-oversight dimension to the job that’s, ahem, missing from the actual job description.

Well, more evidence of the same from the Vermont Press Bureau (behind the Herald/TA paywall, as far as I can tell):

During a news conference at the Secretary of State’s office, the 58-year-old Illuzzi said he would bring to the auditor’s office a legislative track record of challenging establishment policy positions pushed by governors, powerful lawmakers and industry leaders. The most recent example, Illuzzi said, was his fight against aspects of the proposed merger of the state’s two largest electric utilities, Central Vermont Public Service and Green Mountain Power. 



“You need an independent voice who is willing to respectfully and constructively stand up to the establishment and question certain policies and programs, and I think I’ve done that,” said Illuzzi.

He seems to believe that he’d be judge, jury, and Executioner, dispensing his wisdom on questions of finance, policy, and politics alike. Moreover, he seems to see himself as being uniquely qualified to take on this responsibility.

Quite an ego there.

We’ll see how the race plays out — Illuzzi promises specific proposals when he formally launches his campaign — but the way it looks right now, if you want an Auditor, you’d best vote for Doug Hoffer. If you want a loose cannon, then by all means vote for Vince Illuzzi.

Defer, defer,

to the Lord High Executioner!

Bow down, bow down,

to the Lord High Executioner!

A sad excuse for a Republican ticket

Well, the filing deadline has come and gone. And while the Democrats have a ticket full of strong incumbents and worthy contenders — and the Progressives have put together some good quality folks in their bid to maintain ballot status — the Republicans find themselves in a truly dire state.

The topline from deadline day: no heroes came rushing over the hill to save the VTGOP. They’re largely stuck with an array of has-beens and never-wases. Plus Lt. Gov. Phil Scott, by far the best candidate of the lot. And he’s running for a ceremonial office.

Starting at the top: Randy Brock, on the short end of a 2-1 disadvantage in the latest poll with very few undecideds to work with.

Lieutenant Governor: Phil Scott, already discussed.

US Senator: Who-dats John MacGovern and H. Brook Paige will face off in the Republican primary for the right to lose big-time to Bernie Sanders.

US Representative: Who-dat Mark Donka will be Peter Welch’s designated tomato can.

After the jump: a notable vacancy on the ticket, and a gloomy outlook for the VTGOP.

Secretary of State: the most laughable development of the day. No Republican filed petitions. There’s talk of finding a write-in candidate down the road. Why bother?

Attorney General: Yes indeedy, Jack McMullen is coming back for another attempt to avoid electoral embarrassment. The guy who lost to Fred Tuttle, the businessman with a law degree who’s never actually practiced law, wants to be the state’s top lawyer. McMullen’s only advantage is that he can fully fund his own campaign, should he wish to.

Auditor: State Sen. Vince Illuzzi.

Treasurer: Wendy Wilton, Rutland treasurer best known for her highly partisan and inaccurate “study” of Governor Shumlin’s health care plan. Even though Beth Pearce is an untested politician, she does have the advantage of the incumbent label, and that’s a big deal in these low-profile races. (Just ask Tom Salmon.)

The way it looks right now, Phil Scott is the only Republican who’d be the favorite in any of these races. Illuzzi might have an edge in name recognition over Doug Hoffer — but even that is debatable, since he’s never run for office outside his home county, and Hoffer has some familiarity from his 2010 candidacy.

A ticket this weak is going to make it even harder for Republicans to gain any ground in the State Legislature. Which, I guess, is why chief House Republican Don Turner has openly confessed that he doesn’t expect to gain ground in legislative elections this year.

One other thing I’ll point out here: the two strongest (relatively speaking) Republican candidates, Scott and Illuzzi, are ideological outliers in an increasingly doctrinaire party. Scott tries his best to maintain a moderate image; he might be secretly conservative, but he sure doesn’t play that way in public. And I doubt that he’s going to pay any visible obeisance to the hard-right tenor of 2012’s VTGOP.

And even as he filed as a Republican, Illuzzi was openly courting moderate and Democratic support. He talked at length to VTDigger about how difficult it was to decide whether to run as a Republican or an Independent. He actively distanced himself from the “very conservative individuals” who represent his party in Congress, and added “I am not one of those Republicans.”

Personally, I think the VTGOP is making a huge mistake by tacking hard right, when the Vermont electorate is clearly moderate-to-liberal. If Scott is the only winner — or if Scott and Illuzzi are the only winners — then where will the party go from there? Can it continue to embrace Paul Ryan Republicanism when its only high-profile figure (or two) is visibly moderate?

In any case, deadline day was nothing but good news for Vermont Democrats, who are well-positioned to cement their dominance of state politics in November.  

Yes, Vince Illuzzi is running for Auditor

Apparently, Vince Illuzzi didn’t pull a last-minute switcheroo — he did actually file petitions as a Republican candidate for Auditor General today. He’ll face Doug Hoffer, who has the endorsements of both the Dems and the Progs.

And Illuzzi said something interesting about the job of auditor (per VTDigger):

“It really is about looking at programs to see if they are performing as envisioned by the general assembly and as expected by the public and not resulting in any unintended consequences,” Illuzzi said. “It can really shine a light on how state government is working.”

Well, yes and no. The auditor oversees the financial accountability of state government. Illuzzi seems to envision a role in overseeing policy outcomes as well. That would be a very broad and political vision of the office.

Not really surprising that a politician would see the office that way, but I don’t think it’s accurate or appropriate. During the campaign, he should be asked to amplify or clarify his perception of the office he seeks.  

An unconventional candidate for Lieutenant Governor

According to the Freeps’ Terri Hallenbeck (via Twitter), Cassandra Gekas has filed petitions to run for Lieutenant Governor as a Democrat against incumbent Republican Phil Scott and Progressive Marjorie Power.

Gekas is currently Health Care Advocate at VPIRG. Her bio from the VPIRG website:

Since moving to Vermont in 2005, she has spent time as a national level legislative analyst, an anti-hunger policy advocate and most recently, as a research fellow at UVM’s Transportation Research Center. During her time at the Vermont Campaign to End Childhood Hunger (VTCECH), she played a leading role in several major policy achievements. She has also worked extensively on gender issues, serving as a facilitator for the Domestic Abuse Education Project, volunteering for several domestic violence programs and serving as President of the Vermont Women’s Transportation Seminar. Cass holds a BA in Women’s Studies and Political Science from Pennsylvania State University and MS in Community Development and Applied Economics from the University of Vermont. At VPIRG, Cass conducts policy research and advocacy on health care reform efforts at the state and national levels.

So, a lot of activism on a lot of fronts, and a present focus on Shumlin’s number-one issue. She faces very long odds against Phil Scott. But I’m sure she’ll put up a good fight, and will help carry the banner for health care reform. Might even force Lt. Gov. NiceGuy to take a stand on the issue. Or any issue.  

The decay of that colossal wreck

Sad and wistful thoughts arise in the mind of the traveler who visits the lone and level sands of the antique land that is — or was — Vermont Tiger. There its shattered visage lies, with frown, and wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command.

And there, beside two vast and trunkless legs of stone, lie scattered bits of rubble, all that remain of Tigger’s delusions of intellectual grandeur. Rubble, mostly, from the mind of Art Woolf, pretty much the only person still posting on the site. The Last Tigger Standing, if you will. I have previously dubbed him Vermont’s Loudest Economist ™ for his relentless media presence. But, reading his recent — and lonely — postings on Tigger, I am tempted to substitute a new monicker, Vermont’s Laziest Economist (trademark pending).

After the jump: Signs of laziness.

Take his latest emission, a half-hearted ad hominem attack on Bernie Sanders. Woolf is exercised over Bernie’s brazen introduction of a bill called the End Polluter Welfare Act, which would end federal tax incentives to Big Oil. In Woolf’s eyes, it’s a cardinal sin to name a bill in a way designed to enhance its political appeal, rather than to simply describe its purpose.

Don’t know where Art’s been lately*, but this has been common practice in Washington for quite some time now, and is at least as often done by Republicans as by the odd socialist. Think USA PATRIOT Act, for starters.

*Judging by the fact that, in one recent post, he admitted that he only recently learned of such a thing as “TV shows only available online,” which have been around since the mid-90s, I’d say he’s been under a rock somewhere. Or a vast and trunkless leg, whatever.

At the end of his short rant, Woolf admits that “I don’t know the purpose or the impact of the tax incentives [Sanders] proposes to eliminate.” Now, that’s laziness taken to heroic lengths. He’s hammering a bill whose effect he hasn’t bothered to determine, simply because he doesn’t like its name.

The post before that, also an attack on Bernie Sanders, was even worse, because its laziness was directly related to Woolf’s supposed area of expertise.

(Economics.)

Woolf noted that, three months ago when gas prices were closing in on $4 a gallon, Sanders was quick to cast the blame on speculators. Then he said that since Sanders made his outrageous accusations, the price of oil had fallen by more than 20%.

Woolf took this as proof that Bernie is a goofball because “if speculators have so much power… then why are they allowing prices to fall so much?”

This conclusion is so completely wrong, any sane economist ought to be too embarrassed to put it out for public consumption. If Woolf knows anything about how investors and speculators work, he would know that they don’t always want higher prices, nor are they always in full control of all circumstances.

On the former point, the wise guys on Wall Street don’t like persistent price rises; they like fluctuations, because they know how to make money both ways. If a price consistently rose, then all the “dumb money” would flow in and wreck the game. Specific example: investors might take a short position on oil if they believe that prices will fall in the near future. Obviously, they don’t want prices to rise; they’ll lose money.

On the latter, remember the big oil price spike in the spring of 2008? It was the economic event of the year — or it was, until the mega-Wall Street meltdown that followed. The oil spike can be traced back to late 2007, when the mortgage market began to collapse and the smart money started looking for safe havens. Many investors turned to commodities, and the prices of oil, wheat, gold, and other items went through the roof. Not because of supply or demand, but because of speculation. Then, in the summer of 2008, there were some disastrous hurricanes that interrupted oil drilling and refining on the Gulf of Mexico. There were predictions of $5 or even $6 a gallon gas. But at the same time, Wall Street was going belly-up and a lot of speculators needed to turn their oil positions into cash.

And, in spite of the hurricanes and the interruptions in supply, gas prices went down.  

That’s just one example. The bigger issue is that Woolf is basing his argument on one single price movement and ignoring all the evidence that speculators do exert an unhealthy influence on energy prices. Bernie Sanders cites a figure of 80% of all oil trading is by speculators — not by those who want to consume oil, but by those who want to make money by trading the rights to oil back and forth.

But if you want to discount the claims of Vermont’s Homegrown Socialist, let’s turn to the absolutely non-collectivist Bloomberg Business Week, and an article entitled “Rising Gas Prices: Not Demand Driven.” (GMD readers with severe cases of OCD will recall this passage from a February posting entitled “Gas Pump-a-geddon!” It’s just as pertinent here.) Bloomberg quotes Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst for the Oil Price Information Service:

Kloza believes much of the increase is due to speculative money that’s flowed into gasoline futures contracts since the beginning of the year, mostly from hedge funds and large money managers. “We’ve seen about $11 billion of speculative money come in on the long side of gas futures,” he says.

Speculator-driven crude prices went so high in February that some refineries cut production or even shut down rather than operate at a loss — which meant lower gas production and higher prices.

In that same diary, I referred to another unlikely source of speculator-bashing: the Vermont Fuel Dealers Association. For years, they have been calling for strict limits on commodities speculation because they see how speculator-driven price fluctuations can cause great harm to oil dealers and  consumers alike.

Art Woolf blithely ignores all this evidence and more, simply to take a cheap shot at Bernie Sanders. And now you know why I’m tempted to call him Vermont’s Laziest Economist (trademark pending).

I look on his works, and despair.  

Donovan calls for new open-records law

The race for Vermont Attorney General is getting more interesting in a hurry. We’ve had the first dirty trick of the campaign, targeting Democratic challenger TJ Donovan. And the challenger has taken a big step in differentiating himself from incumbent Bill Sorrell on an important policy issue — calling for much more open access to police records in Vermont.

Donovan said current law in Vermont has a “presumption of secrecy” relating to requests for information about criminal investigations.

He went on to assert that the Attorney General should take a leading role in advocating changes in the law — offering some direct criticism, after a campaign that had been rather indirect so far.

“I think the Attorney General hasn’t been addressing this issue,” Donovan said. “The Attorney General is the state’s top lawyer. This is about leadership.”

Records secrecy should be a vulnerable point for Sorrell, especially in the Democratic primary, because he has consistently sought to keep records closed — especially in cases of possible abuses by law-enforcement officers and officials.

A few examples and Sorrell’s rebuttal… after the jump.  

The very physical arrest in 2010 of Wayne Burwell inside his own home by Hartford police. VTDigger and the Valley News have sought release of police records; the police have refused, and Sorrell has backed them up. (This is one of three incidents involving the Hartford police in the past two years; in all three cases, Sorrell’s office exonerated the department.)

On New Year’s Eve 2010, Jamek Hart was arrested by Rutland police on a drunk-and-disorderly charge. While in custody, handcuffed in a holding cell, an officer repeatedly fired a pepper-ball gun at Hart. The officer later resigned. In the wake of the incident, Sorrell called for a state police investigation. I can find no record of a conclusion or report from that investigation; I will happily include that information if someone can provide it.

Sorrell played a legally dubious role in the regrettable case of convicted murderer Douglas Mason. It’s a very complicated situation, but the core of the problem is that the Vermont Parole Board issued a warrant containing false charges in an attempt to keep Mason in prison. And, as the Burlington Free Press noted:

The full story came to light only after U.S. District Judge William K. Sessions III ordered the state to release documents being withheld from federal prosecutors on the advice of the state Attorney General’s Office.

Hmm. I don’t know what the usual etiquette is in such situations, but it strikes me as a really bad idea for a state Attorney General to advise the withholding of documents from federal prosecutors.

A really, really bad idea.

And then there was the case of possession of child pornography by personnel at the Vermont Police Academy. After an investigation, Sorrell declined to bring any charges, and he fought an effort by the Rutland Herald to gain access to the state police files. The state Supreme Court ruled against the Herald in that case.

Sorrell has insisted that he isn’t too cozy with the cops; that he has prosecuted law enforcement officials when he believed it appropriate. In cases of access to police records, Sorrell claims that he is simply doing his job:

“I’ve been following the law as the Legislature has passed it, which I think the attorney general is supposed to do,” said Sorrell. “If we’re talking about proposed changes to the law, that’s something – if the Legislature asked for an opinion on the legality or for policy reasons – I’m happy to engage in that.”

A noble sentiment, but an astoundingly passive one. That passage from the Vermont Press Bureau is available here online. Sorrell went on to say that he has publicly supported a change in the law to allow access to records of police-misconduct probes. And then, in a passage that’s apparently behind the Herald/Times Argus paywall, he added the following:

Sorrell said he has been on the record with that proposal in the last two months. Asked why he didn’t start advocating that position sooner, he said: “The issue about changing or reviewing the access to public records has just come into the fore in the last six months or so, and we were waiting to be called into the Legislative committees looking into reviewing the exemptions and sort of waiting to be called on that.”

Again, curiously passive from the man who’s held the state’s top law-enforcement position for 15 years. “The issue…has just come into the fore in the last six months or so”? Completely false. It’s been brewing for several years, and has especially heated up in the past couple of years. And “waiting to be called into the Legislative committees”? Waiting? Waiting? You’re the Attorney General, for Pete’s sake. If you seriously believe it’s an issue, what in hell were you waiting for?

It’s weak, really weak. As Donovan said, “This is about leadership.” And on this issue, Bill Sorrell has failed to provide any.

Not exactly what I’d expect from a “two-fisted attorney general.”

The AG race starts to get dirty

(Update: I’ve slightly edited this entry due to a Comment from regular commenter “simplify” pointing out that, as a matter of legal fact, Donovan does not have a criminal record. The record was expunged. Therefore, the title of “Fair Game” is inaccurate, and so was the wording of my diary.)

(Update to the update: It’s been pointed out that Fair Game’s title says that “Donovan had a criminal record,” which is factually accurate.)

Lead item in this week’s “Fair Game” column in Seven Days is about a heretofore-undisclosed incident in TJ Donovan’s past. It seems that Donovan, who has been very open about his troubled youth, got into a drunken fight when he was 18 years old and was charged with aggravated assault. (The charge was pled down to a misdemeanor, Donovan did community service and paid restitution to the victim, and the crime was expunged from his record.)

Donovan’s been Chittenden County State’s Attorney since 2006, but now that he’s running against Attorney General Bill Sorrell, the case comes to light for the first time. And how did it come to Seven Days’ attention? The old-fashioned way.  

Fair Game received an anonymous tip through the mail about the incident, which Donovan immediately confirmed when asked.

How about that. He challenges the Attorney General, and suddenly information (presumably from law enforcement files) about an expunged incident that happened 20 years ago is made public.

I’m sure Mr. Sorrell himself had nothing directly to do with it. Gotta maintain plausible deniability at the very least. But I’m equally sure that someone who supports him was responsible for the leak. Is the Sorrell team feeling a little nervous, perhaps?  

The Governor puts down some roots

Well, well. Not only is Gov. Shumlin running for re-election — he’s planning to move a lot closer to his office, at least most of the time. Vermont Press Bureau:

Peter Shumlin has added a parcel of land in East Montpelier to his real estate portfolio.

…t isn’t another investment property. Shumlin plans to build himself a modest abode sometime in the future.

“I’m going to put in a really energy efficient governor’s cabin,” he said.

Ah, the ol’ Governor’s Cabin. Just like Old Abe Lincoln, come out o’ the wilderness. I’m sure our Guv is looking forward to those quiet evenings on his front porch, whittlin’ as the sun goes down. Those weekends splittin’ wood for the winter. Those late nights, reading by the light of the fireplace.

Evabodah sing…  

Old Pete Shumlin came out of the wilderness,

Out of the wilderness,

Out of the wilderness,

Old Pete Shumlin came out of the wilderness

Many long years ago.

Old Jim Douglas tore down the government,

tore down the government,

tore down the government,

Old Jim Douglas tore down the government

Many long years ago.

But old Pete Shumlin he built up a better one,

built up a better one,

built up a better one.

Old Pete Shumlin built up a better one

Many long years ago.  

Vince Illuzzi makes up his mind (sorta kinda)

Note: Updated with confirmation from vtBuzz below.

Longtime State Senator (and nearly-disbarred lawyer) Vince Illuzzi says he plans to file candidacy petitions for Auditor General on Thursday, which is deadline day for state candidates. Thus endeth his lengthy dither on which office to run for… Auditor, Senator, or (earlier) Attorney General.

Or… DOES it????

Candidates are technically allowed to file petitions for multiple offices, so Illuzzi could file to run for re-election to his Senate seat while also keeping the option open to run for auditor, but he says he doesn’t plan on it.

“You’ll know for sure on Thursday,” Illuzzi said.

Awwww, jeeziz, Vince. Cut it out already and make up your mind.

Illuzzi’s announcement, if that’s what it can accurately be called, did have a domino effect up in the NEK. Former Democratic State Rep. John Rogers, who had been planning another bid for the House, started gathering petition signatures for a Senate run. And Republican Rep. Bob Lewis has announced his candidacy for Illuzzi’s Senate seat.

Which he hasn’t quite let go of yet. Vince Illuzzi, the Hamlet of Vermont politics.

Update: The Freeps’ politics blog, vtBuzz, says Illuzzi has, in fact, made up his mind and WILL run for Auditor as a Republican.  

Hammer and nails

We’ve cited the phrase before in relation to the use of shiny new technology by law enforcement, whether or not the technology is truly appropriate: To a man with a hammer, everything looks like a nail.

Well, thanks to a well-developed military hardware industry and free-flowing Homeland Security grants for up-armoring your local constabulary, we have this:  

A summer morning’s peace ended jarringly Monday morning when more than a dozen police cruisers, an armored vehicle and the big box truck that houses Vermont’s equivalent of a SWAT team set up shop in Washington to take what proved to be one unarmed man into custody.

(Times Argus; story behind a paywall as of this writing. I’ll update w/link if ti becomes available without paying.)

And no, we’re not talking Washington, D.C. We’re talking Washington, Vermont, sleepy little village, population 1,047. In response to an uncertain situation that might possibly have led to violence, the cops rolled out the heavy artillery and all the troops, shattering the atmosphere of a quiet rural community.  

The whole mess started Saturday night when Sara Perreault was taken to a hospital for treatment of injuries allegedly inflicted by her husband Albert. a 68-year-old retired granite worker  Police were on the scene from Saturday night until Monday morning, when they brought in their heavy gear.

During that time, numerous attempts were made to reach Perreault by phone. At one point, police tried a loudspeaker. According to the T-A, “police learned that Perreault had allegedly threatened himself and police.” Perreault was known to be an avid hunter and had guns in the house. A neighbor said that the couple had “a combustible relationship,” and it wasn’t the first time police had responded to their home.

Unable to know what to make of their inability to contact Perreault – first by phone and later with a public address system outside his residence – police blocked off the half-mile stretch of Route 110 just south of the village for nearly an hour Monday.



Part of that response, presumably, was the State Police’s new Lenco BearCat G3 armored truck, acquired last November. Price tag: $255,398. About 190K was covered by a Homeland Security grant (Your Tax Dollars At Work) and the rest came from drug-forfeiture funds. This is the same Lenco I wrote about in February, when they were trying to sell a BearCat to Keene, NH, and its sales guy, Jim Massery, said this:

When a Lenco Bearcat shows up at a crime scene where a suicidal killer is holding hostages, it doesn’t show up with a cannon. It shows up with a negotiator.

Yeah, right. And as I said at the time,

How about, “When a Lenco Bearcat shows up at a crime scene, the suicidal killer will fly into a panic and start shooting”?

In the Perreault case, police had a guy holed up in his house with guns, possibly with violent intent, and he wouldn’t answer the phone. A police response was appropriate.

But is there really no option between a cruiser with a loudspeaker and a small invasion of a country town? Can we expect more of this inappropriate militarization of what might well be routine situations?

We’ve given the police a hammer, and they saw Alfred Perreault and the village of Washington as nails. Your neighborhood may be next.