For a good metaphor of the year experienced by Rhode Island in 2008, consider the economic-development summit called by Governor Carcieri in November.
Proponents of a pox on both houses can point to the General Assembly, barely few of whose members deigned to attend the governor's economic-development summit, indicating to some an utter lack of engagement with the state's most pressing issues.
Then again, politics can be a very personal business. So considering how Carcieri routinely turned to talk-radio to fire rhetorical fusillades against the Democratic-dominated legislature (and how this might have played some small role in the defeat of Senate President Joseph A. Montalbano, by a governor-supported independent), the General Assembly rank-and-file wasn't about to rush to play ball with the Republican.
To sum it all up: even though Rhode Island's need for greater economic development couldn't be more obvious — as demonstrated by how the state eclipsed Michigan late in the year as the nation's unemployment rate leader — other things once again got in the way. Welcome to the More it Changes, the More it Stays the Same state.