Can the RI GOP Rebound - Experts Weigh In

GoLocalProv News Team and Kate Nagle

Can the RI GOP Rebound - Experts Weigh In

What is the fate of the RI GOP following 2018?
The Rhode Island Republican Party is at a crossroads after a tough election season.  

After being unable to take out a vulnerable Democrat in Governor Gina Raimondo, an embattled Speaker in Nicholas Mattiello, losing two House seats in the Rhode Island General Assembly — and failing to take any statewide positions — can the Grand Old Party rebound in the Ocean State?  

“The party needs to reassess its role and double down and focus on getting candidates elected to the General Assembly,” said incoming House Minority Leader Blake Filippi, who was first elected to District 36 in 2014.  “Of course we want talented statewide office candidates -- but the way we can start to make the most difference is by getting candidates elected to the General Assembly. I often get most frustrated in Presidential election years, when there's no chance ever that Rhode Island electoral votes will go to a Republican -- yet activist and state party resources are wasted on presidential campaigns."

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SLIDES: SEE WHAT EXPERTS SAY BELOW

And while the state GOP dealt with in-party fighting which saw gubernatorial candidate and outgoing House Minority Leader Patricia Morgan endorse Joe Trillo over primary victor and Cranston Mayor Allan Fung, national political experts see the issue as being larger than just Rhode Island. 

“No, it can’t rebound,” said Brookings Institutions Vice-President Darrell West, of the Rhode Island Republican Party. “It is going to be hard for Rhode Island Republicans to recover during the Trump era. Sentiment there is strongly anti-Trump and it is difficult for GOP candidates to separate themselves from the president. It is easy for Democrats to morph every Republican into a mini-Trump.”

Parsing Post-2018 

Incoming House Minority Leader Blake Filippi
Nearly 373,000 Rhode Islanders cast their vote for a gubernatorial candidate in 2018 — 50,000 more votes than in 2014.

And, in communities like East Greenwich, the wave of blue simply overwhelmed Republican candidates.

The GOP strategy of surrendering many of the statewide and Congressional races in exchange of building the party from the grassroots level turned into a political slaughter with key GOP incumbents losing their seats and two high profile Republican hopefuls losing high profile races — GOP National Committeeman Steve Frias losing again to Speaker of the House Nick Mattiello and Republican State Chairman Brandon Bell losing badly in his bid for a House seat to one-term legislator Alex Marszalkowski.

On Sunday, Republican State Representative Bobby Nardolillo — who had declared for the U.S. Senate race before bowing out when Bob Flanders garnered the party’s endorsement — posted on Facebook the following. 

“I talked with a few of my Democrat friends today who are still baffled how Raimondo broker 50% and [Democratic Senator Sheldon] Whitehouse broke 60%. I guess you can polish a commode."

“Organization, message, money and a story to tell,” wrote former Director of Administration and GOP advisor Gary Sasse. 

This story was first published  11/12/18 2:30 AM. Updated 11/12/18 at 9:35 AM 

SLIDES: SEE WHAT EXPERTS SAY BELOW


Rebuilding the GOP -- November 2018

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