residents during his 2002 mayoral campaign. Upon leaving Keegan, Laffey went to Vermont during the summer of 2001. While there, he attended a retreat at
Camp of the Woods, a Christian conference center in the Adirondacks. He attended the retreat with some of his Harvard Business School classmates and it was at that time that he stated he felt the "call" to enter politics. Laffey was quoted as saying: When he entered office in 2003, Cranston had the lowest bond rating in America and its city pension had only $9 million in assets and $250 million in liabilities. . Laffey was criticized by many government workers during his term as mayor. His critics were mainly unions representing the city workers including the union representing the city crossing guards. He privatized the 39 crossing guard positions to save the city $800,000 per year. He also faced opposition from the firefighter's union and the school union. Laffey credits this to confronting unions and cutting excesses in school spending. In 2006, Laffey distinguished Cranston by making it the only Rhode Island city to cut property taxes that year. Laffey was the host of his own radio show in 2005 on
WPRO in Rhode Island.
The Steve Laffey Show came under attack when he was accused of using free airtime to obtain name recognition. The Board of Elections ruled unanimously that the free airtime and name recognition amounted to political contributions in excess of $1,000, a violation of state law. The show ran on Fridays and Laffey was not paid for hosting the show; however, the Board of Elections ordered him to shut down the show. Laffey then filed a lawsuit against the Board citing violation of his 1st Amendment rights and for treating him differently than other politicians. The 1st Circuit Court of Appeals gave the Board time to reconsider their action and consult with the Rhode Island Supreme Court on the issue. After the decision, the Board allowed Laffey to return to the air.
2006 United States Senate campaign On September 8, 2005, Laffey announced that he would be running for the
United States Senate. He faced incumbent Republican
Lincoln Chafee. Laffey ran as the populist/conservative alternative to Chafee, being
anti-abortion, and supporting both the
Central American Free Trade Agreement and
Samuel Alito's appointment to the
Supreme Court. Main points of Laffey's campaign include eliminating what he calls
pork barrel spending, simplifying the
tax code, and reducing prescription drug costs. During the primary, Chafee and the
National Republican Senatorial Committee attacked Laffey for calling for the city of Cranston to accept consular ID cards from
Mexico and
Guatemala. Mailers sent out by the Chafee campaign called the cards "illegal immigration cards" and said accepting them poses a security risk. However, others contended that the cards help police and immigrants. The national Republican establishment went after Laffey, believing he was too conservative for heavily liberal Rhode Island. The NRSC spent $1 million in TV ads attacking Laffey. Laffey was defeated by Chafee in the primary election on September 12, 2006. The Republican primary was the largest turnout in Rhode Island history. Although he lost the primary, Laffey received a total of 29,500 votes, more than the 27,906 votes received by John Chafee in 1994 and more than the combined GOP gubernatorial primary of Carcieri and James Bennett in 2002. The actions of the National Republican Senatorial Campaign Committee during the primary were referred to as unprecedented as they engaged in attacks on an elected Republican. Chafee was eventually defeated by Democratic state attorney general
Sheldon Whitehouse in the general election by an 8-point margin (54% to 46%). Despite Chafee's high approval ratings statewide, Whitehouse pointed out that Chafee supported his party's more conservative leadership. After the defeat, Chafee stated that he was unsure if he would remain in the GOP and stated that he felt that the loss may have helped switch control of power in Congress back to the Democrats.
2010 gubernatorial campaign Laffey was believed to be a potential candidate for the governorship in 2010. He was rumored to be a candidate with incumbent Republican
Donald Carcieri being unable to run for a third term due to Rhode Island's two term limit. He later announced he would not run. He declared that he would run for
Governor of Colorado in
2014, but withdrew from the race a week later after former Congressman
Tom Tancredo declared that he would also run.
2014 United States House of Representatives campaign Laffey sought the Republican nomination for
Colorado's 4th congressional district in
2014. He finished fourth in the primary with 16% of the vote, behind winner
Ken Buck (44%),
Scott Renfroe (24%), and
Barbara Kirkmeyer (16%).
2024 U.S. presidential campaign Laffey announced he would run for
president on February 2, 2023, in
the 2024 Republican primary. He pledged to visit every citizen in
New Hampshire to discuss his ideas. He was the first Republican challenger against
Donald Trump and positioned himself as an alternative to Trump, focusing on economic issues while criticizing the direction of the Republican Party. He withdrew from the race on October 6, 2023, and left the Republican Party to become an independent. ==Writing and filmmaking==