How the Democrats Lost Their Grip on Fall River

Donald Trump was the first Republican presidential candidate to win Fall River in 100 years. His victory reveals how local Democrats have lost many institutional connections to working-class voters they once used to win elections

Less than half of Fall River’s voters cast ballots in the presidential election this month.
Less than half of Fall River’s voters cast ballots in the presidential election this month.
Gretchen Ertl / The Public’s Radio
Share
Less than half of Fall River’s voters cast ballots in the presidential election this month.
Less than half of Fall River’s voters cast ballots in the presidential election this month.
Gretchen Ertl / The Public’s Radio
How the Democrats Lost Their Grip on Fall River
Copy

For a long time, the glue that held together the various constituencies of Fall River politics was the Democratic ward committee.

The city’s nine ward committees were little outposts of the party with a presence in every neighborhood of Fall River. Each committee had up to 35 members elected from the surrounding neighborhood, many unionized factory workers, teachers, and mail carriers.

“We would caucus in a bar room or a club or the back of a church,” recalled Fall River Mayor Paul Coogan, a former high school vice principal.

For most of his life, Coogan said that if you had a problem in Fall River, you could see your neighbors on the ward committee, and they might put you in touch with a Democrat at City Hall or the State House who could fix it. Politicians listened to the ward committees, Coogan said because the committees helped get them elected.

“When you ran for office, you’d go to the ward one committee and say, ‘I’d really appreciate your support,’” he said. “And then you’d try to build your organization out from those. But they’re just — it’s not as strong a system as it used to be.”

This story was reported by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

The newly elected party chair outlines his strategy for expanding state GOP ranks and weighs in on energy costs, immigration enforcement and election integrity
For $10, the Rhode Island Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals’ cats will quite literally do their business on a pink paper heart bearing your chosen name
A new report details how the state aims to build an AI-ready workforce, modernize government, and stay competitive
Roger Williams Medical Center and Our Lady of Fatima hang in the balance
More than 9 million students had school disrupted by climate change last year. Researchers at Brown University have launched the SustainableED initiative to study what rising temperatures will mean for our education system
Protestors gather in subfreezing temperatures to ‘unwelcome’ U.S. defense secretary