Happy Monday! I'm Dan McGowan, and Ed Fitzpatrick deserves a slice of cake for covering the last week of the General Assembly session AND writing Rhode Map. Follow me on X (Twitter) @DanMcGowan, on Bluesky @danmcgowan
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Pawtucket might have a serious mayoral race on its hands.
Adam Greenman, the president and CEO of the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island, confirmed that he plans to challenge Mayor Don Grebien in the Democratic primary next year. He opened a campaign account and launched a website to begin fundraising last week, and hopes to bring in $150,000 to run a competitive race.
His campaign website points out that the hospital where his daughter was born is closed, the baseball team his family rooted for moved to Worcester, and the Mr. Potato Head statue he measured his kids’ height against could come down soon if Hasbro leaves Pawtucket.
“So much has changed about Pawtucket in the last 14 years, but the leadership hasn’t,” Greenman told me over the weekend.
The bigger picture: Greenman is not a pushover, even as a first-time candidate. He’s a smart and thoughtful community leader who shouldn’t have trouble raising money, and his wife, Erin, was on the school committee for a decade.
Then again, Grebien is having a bit of a moment right now.
The new Rhode Island FC soccer stadium is beautiful and the train station parking lot seems to be filled every day, so Grebien has real accomplishments to run on. Democratic insiders have even floated his name as a potential challenger to Lieutenant Governor Sabina Matos next year.
Greenman acknowledged that he faces an uphill battle against Grebien, who is generally well-liked by the voters and his colleagues in government. It’s also never easy to beat an incumbent, as Grebien learned in 2008 when he lost to then-mayor James Doyle.
But Greenman maintains that “there has never been a campaign about competing visions for the city” in Grebien’s 14 years in office. It’s true. Grebien has won every election by comfortable margins.
“I think this is about the past versus future,” Greenman said. “Being nice isn’t enough to move the city forward.”
🤔 So you think you're a Rhode Islander...
Who has won the most Hall of Fame Open tennis tournaments in Newport?
(The answer is below.)
Do you have the perfect question for Rhode Map readers? Don't forget to send the answer, too. Shoot me an email today.
The Globe in Rhode Island
⚓ As the legislative session entered its final hours, the Rhode Island General Assembly on Friday voted for a Senate bill banning the sale, purchase, and manufacture of assault-style weapons, but not their possession. Read more.
⚓ A federal judge last week blocked the Trump administration from withholding billions of dollars in transportation funds from states that don’t agree to participate in some immigration enforcement actions. Read more.
⚓ A Rhode Island state lawmaker is urging Governor Dan McKee to ban State Police from using unmarked vehicles, saying such tactics mirror those used by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement and, in turn, stoke confusion, stress, and anxiety in local communities. Read more.
⚓ This week's Ocean State Innovators Q&A with Ellen McCreedy, an associate professor of health services, policy, and practice at the Brown University School of Public Health, who is studying a toe-tapping alternative that could reduce reliance on antipsychotic medications. Read more.
You can check out all of our coverage at Globe.com/RI
Also in the Globe
⚓ For President Trump, the decision to attack the nuclear infrastructure of a hostile nation represents the biggest -- and potentially most dangerous -- gamble of his second term. Read more.
⚓ Colorado Governor Jared Polis is distinguishing himself as a rare Democrat willing to engage with Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s "Make America Healthy Again” policy agenda. Read more.
⚓ My colleague Peter Abraham offers the best analysis of all angles of the Rafael Devers trade. Read more.
⚓ The board for the Rhode Island Infrastructure Bank meets at 3 p.m. Here's the agenda.
🏆 Pop quiz answer
John Isner, who retired in 2023, won the Hall of Fame Open four times.
RHODE ISLAND REPORT PODCAST Ed Fitzpatrick talked with Eva Erickson, the Brown University PhD candidate who became the first openly autistic person to compete on the "Survivor" TV show. Listen to all of our podcasts here.
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