GOP’s Steve Frias Not Ready to Concede to Mattiello

Stephen Beale, GoLocalProv Contributor

GOP’s Steve Frias Not Ready to Concede to Mattiello

Steve Frias, a Boston attorney and Republican National Committeeman for Rhode Island, is locked in a tight race with House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello.

Although polls show Frias ahead by two points—49 percent to 47 percent—Mattiello is claiming that mail ballots have pushed him ahead. Mattiello has already claimed victory in the race. Republican National Committeewoman Lee Ann Sennick told GoLocalProv that the state GOP is challenging the mail ballots in the race.

“I think I’m going to win this,” Frias said in a brief speech to supporters at the Shriners Hall in Cranston.

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Frias said he arrived prepared to give two speeches—a victory speech and a concession speech. With the final outcome of the race still hanging in the balance, Frias quipped that he was going to deliver a “wait-and-see” speech. He said that the latest returns showed him ahead by 147 votes.

Regardless of the outcome, Frias said his campaign had already made a difference in forcing Mattiello to take action on government reform and the economy. “My campaign finally pushed the Speaker to do something,” Frias said.

In his public remarks, re-elected Cranston Mayor Allan Fung praised Frias and noted that he was still ahead in the official vote total. “Steve’s in a tight race where he’s up. We’re rooting for you Steve,” Fung said.

As of this writing, Frias has yet to speak at the Republican headquarters at the Shriners’ Hall in Cranston.

Steve Frias (GOP) and Nick Mattiello (DEM)
The race has been one of the most closely watched locally in Rhode Island. In October, GoLocalProv ranked it at the top 15 hottest races in the state.

Heading into Election Day, Republicans were optimistic about their chances in the race. “There is a good chance that Nick Mattiello loses to Steve Frias on Tuesday,” House Minority Leader Brian Newberry wrote in a private Facebook message to members of the GOP caucus earlier in the day. The message outlined the Republican strategy in the next election for House Speaker.

Frias is an award-winning local political columnist and has authored a book about the history of Cranston, Cranston and Its Mayors: A History.

He ran on a platform of government reform and economic revival.

In a September 6 interview with GoLocalProv, Frias said the top issues in the race included corruption and the economy. “The biggest issue I am hearing from voters after knocking on thousands of doors is their disgust with the culture of corruption at the State House, in particularly with Mattiello’s House leadership team. Voters are also frustrated with our state’s stagnant economy and disagree with the imposition of the new tolls,” Frias said.

Frias said he decided to run because of his conviction that the leadership of the General Assembly needs to change. “Over the past year, there has been one frustrating story after another,” he told GoLocalProv. Those stories included the taxpayer-funded park for the PawSox, new revelations on the role of the House leadership in the 38 Studios scandal, and the tolls proposal.   

On 38 Studios, Frias has called for greater transparency.

“Speaker Mattiello should now call upon the State Police and the Attorney General to release the information they have collected through their investigation, in particular as it relates to involvement of current or prior elected officials in 38 Studios,” Frias said in August, after it was reported that the State Police and state Attorney General had wrapped up their investigations in the matter.

If the State Police or Attorney General’s office failed to produce the requisite documents, Frias said Mattiello should direct the House Oversight Committee to conduct its own investigation.

He has also tried to tie the scandal over House Finance Vice Chairman Rep. John Carnevale’s residency to Mattiello, calling on the Speaker to relieve Carnevale of his leadership post.

In terms of government reform, Frias specifically called for a reduction in the power wielded by the House Speaker. Among the reforms he has proposed are a line-item veto, overhauling legislative grants, and making the General Assembly subject to the requirements of the state open meetings law.

In addition to local issues, Frias had also been dogged by problems stemming from the top of the ticket. As Donald Trump staggered from one gaffe and scandal to another over the course of the summer, Frias had been notably reluctant to discuss his party’s nominee.

Prior to the election, some commentators had warned that Trump’s candidacy might hurt down-ballot candidates. However, it was unclear the nature and extent of Trump’s impact in Rhode Island, which, on the one hand is a reliably blue state, but, on the other, handed Trump his biggest margin of victory while the GOP primaries were still contested.


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