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C. Eugene Emery Jr.
By C. Eugene Emery Jr. June 8, 2014

Gubernatorial candidate Allan Fung says his Republican primary opponent, Ken Block, supports Obamacare

In the contest to be the next Republican candidate for governor in Rhode Island, Cranston Mayor Allan Fung has released a TV commercial that lampoons supporters of his GOP opponent, businessman Ken Block.

The commercial, called "Blockhead," portrays them with large, cube-shaped heads and has them espousing positions that most Republicans would find objectionable, as "Over the Waves," a song often heard during circus trapeze acts, plays in the background.

One of the "blockhead" characters says: "Block supports Obamacare," a reference to the Affordable Care Act that Republicans in Congress have tried to repeal, gut or delay more than 50 times.  

When the ad was released June 2, 2014, Block's campaign manager Jeff Britt, publicly invited PolitiFact Rhode Island to evaluate the claim because, he said, it misrepresents Block’s position on Obamacare.

How could we resist?

Britt sent us an email stating, unequivocally, that "Ken never supported Obamacare." He added that Block, who "has frankly been a strong critic, pointing out in speeches and in radio interviews how devastating it has been to his business."

When Block, president of a Barrington software firm, reacted to the commercial on Buddy Cianci's WPRO radio show, he made the same assertion: "I've never supported Obamacare, in fact I've whacked Obamacare pretty hard because of the negative impact it's had on my business and the cost of acquiring insurance."

While we were waiting for information from the Fung campaign seeking the source of its claim, we examined a new flier from Fung’s campaign that made a slightly different claim about Block's support for Obamacare. It shows a green-faced Block, along with Gov. Lincoln Chafee, depicted as "Two Peas in a Pod" because both "have been cheerleaders for liberal agendas."

"Both supported Obamacare," it asserts, characterizing Block's support in the past tense.

So where's the truth?

Unlike the television ad, which lists no source for its claim, the flier says the claim is based on Block's Nov. 15, 2013 appearance on the WPRI-TV show "Newsmakers."

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Four minutes into that program, Block states that he has voted for both Republicans and Democrats in the past, including President Obama in 2012.

"In 2012, I bought what Barack Obama was selling in terms of changes to health care for me as a small business owner, someone who buys insurance for employees. I can no longer afford to do what we're doing. And I believed that Obamacare, the Affordable Care Act, was going to provide the kind of relief that we needed in my business to insure my employees," he says.

"And it turns out that the promise didn't live up to the hype, and I fairly regret the vote," Block continued. "I'm looking for answers and those answers didn't come."

In other words, Block acknowledged in November that he did support the promise of Obamacare, signed into law in March 2010, and Obama's reelection in 2012, but stated that he no longer supports that law.

And on March 31, the enrollment deadline for Obamacare, Block released a statement, published in The Providence Journal, characterizing it as "a horrible bill, ill-conceived, unilaterally passed by one party, and terribly implemented."

He said it "raised taxes and massively disrupted the health insurance market in Rhode Island without increasing competition, access, or affordability."

Even if Fung hadn’t seen that story, we know he is aware of Block’s earlier repudiation of Obamacare. That’s because when Fung appeared on "Newsmakers" on April 11, moderator Tim White challenged Fung over his internet ad that selectively quoted Block's November "Newsmaker" appearance.

He noted that the Fung ad clipped out Block's phrase, "The promise didn’t live up to the hype, and I fairly regret the vote." Fung said he didn't have a problem with the omission.

Despite this, the "Blockhead" commercial says "Block supports Obamacare," asserting that he supports the controversial health care law today.

When the Fung campaign got back to us, spokesmen Patrick Sweeney and Robert Coupe argued that it is accurate to say that Block supports Obamacare today because Block has never called for repeal of the law, as other opponents have and has never formally revoked the support he acknowledged in the November "Newsmakers" appearance.

On the latter point, we disagree. Block has repeatedly made it clear he no longer supports Obamacare. The very "Newsmakers" appearance the Fung campaign cites in its attack on Block shows that.

In light of all the evidence, it is clear that Fung is making a ridiculously blockheaded claim. We rate it Pants On Fire.

(If you have a claim you’d like PolitiFact Rhode Island to check, email us at [email protected]. And follow us on Twitter: @politifactri.)

Our Sources

YouTube.com, "Blockhead," Fung for Governor channel, June 2, 2014, accessed June 4, 2014

CNN.com, "House passes 50th bill to undo Obamacare," March 5, 2014

ProvidenceJournal.com, "GOP rivals for R.I. governor exchange barbs over Fung ad mocking 'blockheads,'" June 1, 2014 and "Republican gubernatorial candidate Ken Block criticizes Obamacare as enrollment deadline nears," March 31, 2014

630WPRO.com, "Ken Block (R) RI Gubernatorial candidate," The Buddy Cianci Show, June 3, 2014, accessed June 5, 2014

WPRI.com, "Watch Newsmakers: GOP governor candidate Ken Block," Nov. 17, 2013, accessed June 4, 2014, and "Newsmakers 4/11/2014: Cranston Mayor Allan Fung, GOP candidate for Governor," April 11, 2014, accessed June 5, 2014

Interviews and emails, Patrick Sweeney and Robert Coupe, Fung for Governor, and Jeff Britt, Ken Block for Governor, June 5-6, 2014

OceanStateCurrent.com, "Ken Block's Q&A with the Cranston Republican City Committee," Jan. 9, 2014, accessed June 5, 2014

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Gubernatorial candidate Allan Fung says his Republican primary opponent, Ken Block, supports Obamacare

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