The Boston Globe, Globe RI Edition
COMMENTARY
We must not surrender to fear. We must not let progress be erased. We must hold the line.
These proposals are not about fiscal responsibility. They are about dismantling economic security and civil rights protections while delivering yet another tax break to billionaires and millionaires, writes the head of the Economic Progress Institute.
By Weayonnoh Nelson-Davies
February 21, 2025
This moment calls for Rhode Island to hold the line against policies that threaten economic security, civil rights, and democracy itself.
To pay for tax cuts for the wealthy and big corporations, congressional leadership is planning to take away health coverage and assistance that millions of people rely upon to buy groceries. This fast-tracked budget process enables extreme policies to pass without adequate scrutiny.
Right now, Congress is moving through a budget resolution and reconciliation process that, if successful, will cause irreparable harm for Rhode Island. We know that the proposal includes $880 billion in Medicaid cuts, which will impact over 324,000 Rhode Islanders, including 87,000 children who rely on RIte Care, and 29,000 seniors. Another $230 billion in cuts to SNAP will negatively impact food assistance for over 144,000 Rhode Islanders.
Our policymakers in Washington must hold the line and strongly reject the misguided plan by out-of-touch leaders in Congress that will lead to more people struggling to pay their bills, afford groceries, and keep access to lifesaving health care. Rhode Islanders deserve better, and we need an alternative plan that lowers costs and helps people afford the basics, so they can build the lives they want for themselves and their families.
These proposals are not about fiscal responsibility. They are about dismantling economic security and civil rights protections while delivering yet another tax break to billionaires and millionaires. Rhode Island depends on federal funding for 36 percent of its budget and is already facing a $220 million deficit. Shifted to our state, these cuts and costs will send shockwaves through our communities, exacerbating inequities and pushing more Rhode Islanders into financial distress.
This is not just about dollars. It is about our true values and democracy. Deep cuts to Medicaid and SNAP, a federal funding freeze, threats against nonprofits, the termination of civil servants, and proposals to eliminate agencies like USAID, the Department of Education, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau will have devastating consequences. At the same time, the nationwide assault on Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion initiatives is part of a larger strategy to starve social programs, eliminate civil rights protections, strip vulnerable communities of their legal rights, erase progress, and silence entire communities.
Our Rhode Island General Assembly must hold the line and protect the people of Rhode Island by raising revenue instead of disinvesting in critical services, defending the values of DEI and adopting equity impact statements, supporting nonprofits and microbusinesses, strengthening consumer protections against predatory lending, and enacting policies that ensure that Rhode Island remains a place where every person — regardless of background — can thrive.
Fellow Rhode Islanders, we cannot afford to be quiet and sit this one out. If we do not stay informed and fight back, decades of progress will be erased under the guise of budget cuts and deregulation. The Economic Progress Institute will continue to fight for a budget and policies that protect, not punish, Rhode Islanders. This is a moment that demands bold, strategic, collective action — not silence, not hesitation. We must stand together as the small and mighty state that we are, raise our voices, and demonstrate that Rhode Island stands for fairness, economic security, and justice for all.
We must not surrender to fear. We must not let progress be erased.
We must hold the line.
Weayonnoh Nelson-Davies, Esq., is executive director of the Economic Progress Institute.