So who is RSG ?

Roosevelt Strategy Group (RSG) RSG, which was founded by Anthony Manetta, was started as a political consulting firm, which gained notoriety for taking on races that beat the odds.

Over time, RSG has diversified its business platform to corporate advisory services where utilizing the relationships and strategic thinking politics afforded, to a seamless transition in taking organization’s to a new level of business operations.

Check our blog out, you'll find some news about our firm (of course), but also some interesting stories about business and politics.

Monday, January 25, 2010

A Free Speech Landmark

Freedom has had its best week in many years. On Tuesday, Massachusetts put a Senate check on a reckless Congress, and yesterday the Supreme Court issued a landmark decision supporting free political speech by overturning some of Congress's more intrusive limits on election spending.


In a season of marauding government, the Constitution rides to the rescue one more time.
Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote yesterday's 5-4 majority opinion in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which considered whether the government could ban a 90-minute documentary called "Hillary: the Movie" that was set to run on cable channels during the 2008 Presidential campaign. Because it was funded by an incorporated group and was less than complimentary of then-Senator Hillary Clinton, the film became a target of campaign-finance limits.

The 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Finance Act, aka McCain-Feingold, banned corporations and unions from "electioneering communications" within 30 days of a primary or 60 days of a general election. Yesterday, the Justices rejected that limit on corporate spending as unconstitutional. Corporations are entitled to the same right that individuals have to spend money on political speech for or against a candidate.

Justice Kennedy emphasized that laws designed to control money in politics often bleed into censorship, and that this violates core First Amendment principles. "Because speech is an essential mechanism of democracy—it is the means to hold officials accountable to the people—political speech must prevail against laws that would suppress it by design or inadvertence," he wrote. The ban on corporate expenditures had a "substantial, nationwide chilling effect" on political speech, he added.

In last year's oral argument for Citizen's United, the Court got a preview of how far a ban on corporate-funded speech could reach. Deputy Solicitor General Malcolm Stewart explained that, under McCain-Feingold, the government had the authority to "prohibit the publication" of corporate-funded books that called for the election or defeat of a candidate.

That was a shock and awe moment at the Court, as it also should have been to a Washington press corps that has too often been a cheerleader for campaign-spending limits. Mr. Stewart was telling a truth already familiar to campaign-finance lawyers and the speech police at the Federal Election Commission. Former FEC Commissioner Hans von Spakovsky recalled yesterday that in 2004 the agency investigated whether a book written by George Soros critical of George W. Bush violated campaign laws. Liberals as much as conservatives should worry about laws that allow such investigations.

The Court's opinion is especially effective in dismantling McCain-Feingold's arbitrary exemption for media corporations. Thus a corporation that owns a newspaper—News Corp. or the New York Times—retains its First Amendment right to speak freely. "At the same time, some other corporation, with an identical business interest but no media outlet in its ownership structure, would be forbidden to speak or inform the public about the same issue," wrote Justice Kennedy. "This differential treatment cannot be squared with the First Amendment."

For instruction and sheer entertainment, we also recommend Justice Antonin Scalia's concurring opinion that demolishes Justice John Paul Stevens's argument in dissent that corporations lack free speech rights because the Founding Fathers disliked them. "If so, how came there to be so many of them?" Mr. Scalia writes, in one of his gentler lines.

The landmark decision—which overturned two Supreme Court precedents—has already sent the censoring political class into orbit. President Obama was especially un-Presidential yesterday, putting on his new populist facade to call it "a major victory for big oil, Wall Street banks, health insurance companies" and other "special interests." Mr. Obama didn't mention his union friends as one of those interests, but their political spending will also be protected by the logic of this ruling. The reality is that free speech is no one's special interest.

New York Senator Chuck Schumer vowed to hold hearings, and the Naderite Public Citizen lobby is already calling for a constitutional amendment that bans free speech for "for-profit corporations." Liberalism's bullying tendencies are never more on display than when its denizens are at war with the speech rights of its opponents.
Perhaps one day the Court will go even further and overturn Buckley v. Valeo, the 1976 decision that was its original sin in tolerating limits on campaign spending. The Court did yesterday uphold disclosure rules, so a sensible step now would be for Congress to remove all campaign-finance limits subject only to immediate disclosure on the Internet. Citizens United is in any event a bracing declaration that Congress's long and misbegotten campaign-finance crusade has reached a Constitutional dead end.


Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Newsday | NY fallout as Scott Brown wins Mass. Senate race




43 m ago By Dan Janison, Newsday, Tuesday January 19th.

The Republican Scott Brown won the Massacussetts Senate seat vacated with the death of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy -- dealing a clear blow to President Barack Obama in his role as national party boss.

From Sen. Charles Schumer, Democrat, whose partisan listen-up contrition is interesting:

“The country is speaking to us, and we will hear them in the agenda we pursue over the next year. Our focus must be on jobs, the economy and delivering for the middle class.”
From Anthony Manetta, who heads the Roosevelt Strategy Group in Babylon, which advises political campaigns:

"The Republican current that started with the Gubernatorial victories in Virginia and New Jersey, then making a stop over in Nassau County with Ed Mangano's win, is not only continuing but still gaining momentum as evident in Massachusetts. The Republican voter seems to not only be voting Republican again, but voting with ferocity."

This analysis by Gerald Seib in the Wall Street Journal is worth a look for the survey information it includes.
From the newspaper's edition earlier today:

"The Democratic party's problems, crystallized in the last-ditch scramble to save Ted Kennedy's Massachusetts Senate seat in a special election Tuesday, can be traced to a simple mistake: Many in the party misread voters' desire to switch parties in recent years as an ideological shift to the left."

"In fact, there is little sign that Americans' ideological tendencies changed much at all, even as voters gave control of Congress to Democrats in 2006 and handed President Barack Obama and the rest of his party a massive victory in 2008. Ideologically, the country remained throughout this period what it was at the outset: a center to center-right nation."

Monday, January 11, 2010

RSG brings on Fortune 100 Sales Pro Berkeley Swezey

Roosevelt Strategy Group is proud to announce that Berk Swezey has joined the RSG team

Berkeley Swezey is an accomplished corporate executive whose talents have earned him a reputation as an industry leader for over forty years in sales and organizational management.

Mr. Swezey has an extensive background in corporate sales and finance having held high profile positions with a number of top companies in including IBM, Erisco and FISERV, this is in addition to helping start-up companies grow from the ground up. Berkeley has owned his own insurance agency and is one of the founders of Swezey Commercial Real Estate.

While employed by IBM in the area of sales and sales management, Berk specialized in selling financial hardware and software systems to Wall Street brokerage houses and other financial institutions throughout the country, eventually focusing his efforts on Credit Unions Nationwide. Swezey, well known for successful seminar sales, set National sales records that have not been broken to date. In addition, during his tenure as a member of their Headquarters Staff Support, he was instrumental in creating and managing National sales contest, training programs and customer service conferences attended by 30 to 40 financial institutions and their 500-600 employees.

After IBM Berkeley joined as one of the 13 stockholders of the then privately held company Erisco Incorporated, a leading provider of employee benefits software to Fortune 1000 companies. Berkeley was responsible for managing the National sales effort that resulted in Erisco’s gross revenue increasing from $2 million to $24 million dollars in five years. He also established a customer service department and developed and instituted customer service programs that increased customer satisfaction from 8% to 94% within the first 10 months of its inception. In addition he hired and trained the sales force, established and produced a workshop series and seminars for Fortune 1000 prospects, and managed the integration of major financial institutions. Berkeley’s efforts were a driving factor in Dun & Bradstreets acquisition of Erisco.

A graduate of Colgate University, Mr. Swezey subsequently attended St. John’s School of Law. He served his country for two years earning an honorable discharge from the army and the community in various capacities, including tenure on the Village of Freeport Board of Trustees. Berkeley Swezey is married with three grown children and resides in Babylon New York.

Mr. Swezey's work will be centered on improving the sales and customer service operations for RSG's management consulting clients.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Winners

RSG wishes to congratulate our firm's winners during the 2009 Election Cycle. RSG provided general strategy, direct mail, creative media and get out the vote consulting for multiple campaigns.