Mayor Cicilline Speaks Out

Vincent Buddy Cianci_20100111104455_JPG

Vincent "Buddy" Cianci, Jr.

Large Map
  • Also on WPRI.com
Unions will sue absent deal on pensions
Unions will sue absent deal on pensions

State leaders should start formal negotiations with union …

Mayor hopeful Prov can avoid bankruptcy
Mayor hopeful Prov can avoid bankruptcy

A markedly more upbeat Providence Mayor Angel Taveras expressed…

Mayor: Providence is facing bankruptcy
Mayor: Providence is facing bankruptcy

At a dramatic news conference, Taveras said the city is near …

Former Gov. Joseph Garrahy laid to rest
Former Gov. Joseph Garrahy laid to rest

Hundreds of people filed into the Cathedral of Saints Peter and…

Judge lets city retirees avoid Medicare
Judge lets city retirees avoid Medicare

The city of Providence suffered a costly legal defeat on Monday…

Advertisement

Cicilline won't appear on WPRO debate

Candidate skipping Cianci show "on principle"

Updated: Tuesday, 17 Aug 2010, 4:21 PM EDT
Published : Tuesday, 17 Aug 2010, 4:17 PM EDT

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP/WPRI) - Providence Mayor David Cicilline plans to skip a radio debate Wednesday on WPRO-AM's "Buddy Cianci Show" in his bid for the Democratic nomination to succeed Patrick Kennedy in Rhode Island's 1st Congressional District.

Eric Hyers, Cicilline's campaign manager, said Tuesday that Cicilline "on principle" does not go on Cianci's show. Hyers would not specify why or comment further.

Cianci, Cicilline's predecessor in office and the longest-serving mayor of Providence before being sent to prison for corruption in 2002, has often used his show as a vehicle to go after the current mayor. Cianci is not scheduled to participate in the hour-long debate and news reporters will ask the questions, but the debate is being billed as a presentation of the "Buddy Cianci Show," Program Manager Paul Giammarco said.

The station is holding debates all week among primary opponents in various races, all of which are scheduled during the last hour of Cianci's talk show. Giammarco said the 5 p.m. slot was picked because it was a good time to reach commuters as they're driving home.

No reliable polls have been conducted in the congressional race since Kennedy announced in February he was leaving -- but Cicilline has several advantages. As mayor of the state's capital city since 2003, he has greater name recognition than his three Democratic opponents in the Sept. 14 primary.

He also has far more money to run a campaign, with about $900,000 cash on hand as of the end of June, according to federal campaign filings. Businessman Anthony Gemma had about $181,000, former Democratic Party Chairman Bill Lynch had about $138,000, and state Rep. David Segal had $80,000.

Gemma on Tuesday said Cicilline is "running and hiding" from an important debate. A spokesman for Lynch said voters want to hear from Cicilline.

Hyers said Cicilline has participated in several debates and forums, including an Eyewitness News debate last month and meet-the-candidates events that some of his opponents did not attend.

WPRO-AM's website shows Cicilline appeared on an "exclusive open forum" with morning show host John DePetro back in May.

The winner of the primary is expected to face Republican state Rep. John Loughlin in the Nov. 2 general election.


Ground rules for posting comments: No profanity or personal attacks. Please comment on the subject of the story itself. If you do not follow these rules, we will remove your post. Keep it civil, folks!

Our commenting section is powered by IntenseDebate. If you registered for an account but didn't receive a verification e-mail, check your spam folder or click here for more information. For additional technical help, click here.

 

Advertisement
Advertisement