Meet the Candidates: Speaker Nicholas Mattiello

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Meet the Candidates: Speaker Nicholas Mattiello

Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello
Meet the candidates this election year. GoLocal is featuring the candidates for General Assembly, those running for Mayor in cities across the state, and the Congressional candidates. This feature allows each candidate the opportunity to express their views on the issues. 

Meet candidate Nicholas Mattiello. The current Speaker of the House is running for reelection in District 15 in Cranston for State Representative. 

1.    What do you think is the biggest political issue this campaign season in Rhode Island?  

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In my race for the House District 15 seat, the biggest issue is: who can be the most effective for the people of the district?  As Speaker, I am proud of my record of delivering for the people of Cranston.  We have increased our city’s education funding by $25 million since 2011.  This has helped Mayor Allan Fung hold the line on taxes and has allowed our schools to restore sports programs and other extra-curricular activities such as arts and music.  Being in a position to help my district, last year I was able to eliminate the state income tax on Social Security for most recipients, and this year we extended that tax exemption to the first $15,000 on all retirement income, including public and private pensions and IRAs.  I am committed to increasing that amount to the first $20,000 of income next year.  And the concern I am hearing most frequently as I visit with families throughout the district is the burdensome and regressive car tax.  I am committed to phasing out the car tax next year, and eliminating it in the coming years.       

2.    What do we need to do to improve Rhode Island's economy?

We need to stay on the path of reducing taxes, adopting business friendly initiatives and keeping Rhode Island competitive with neighboring states.  I am proud that under my leadership in the past three years, we reduced the corporate tax to the lowest rate in the Northeast, in order to attract new businesses to our state, and we cut the annual business minimum tax by 20 percent.  I am working with business owners such as John Hazen White at Taco Inc. in Cranston to continue our momentum toward eliminating the state’s estate tax.  It is critical that business owners want to stay in Rhode Island.  We raised the exemption on the estate tax from about $920,000 to $1.5 million, and I am committed to increasing the amount to $2 million next year.  Rhode Island has enacted important tax credit incentives to attract good-paying companies that commit to creating jobs.  Competitive tax policies and these incentive programs captured the interest of General Electric, which is relocating a technology division in our state.  We have also overhauled our burdensome business regulatory framework.  Rhode Island must build on this business-friendly momentum and enact sound policies that will attract businesses and assist our existing companies. 

3.    What is the greatest challenge facing Rhode Island as a state?

Unfortunately, Rhode Island has faced its share of ethical challenges in recent years and I strongly believe we can, and we must, do better to strengthen public confidence in its government.  I hope the people of Cranston and all of Rhode Island will join me in voting for Question 2, which will restore the jurisdiction of the Ethics Commission over the General Assembly.  I was proud to introduce this legislation placing the Constitutional amendment on the November 8th ballot.  This is one of several reform measures we have enacted in the last few years under my leadership.  Rhode Island eliminated the “master lever” to ensure a fairer election process that enables voters to better evaluate candidates on their qualifications and not strictly on party affiliation. We reformed the campaign finance system to require stricter reporting requirements, and we strengthened the lobbying laws to increase transparency and give the Secretary of State more authority to punish those who don’t follow the rules.  I am not running for State Representative to benefit myself or my family – no one in my family even has a state job.  I will do everything I can to root out anyone who puts their own self-interest above our state’s interest.

4.  Why are you running for office? What makes you uniquely qualified?
  
I am running for office for the same reason that inspired me to first run for State Representative ten years ago.  My wife Mary Ann and I were very involved in our Cranston community as our sons, Nick and Tony, grew up.  From coaching in the Cranston Western Little League and volunteering at Immaculate Conception Church, I knew it was time to do even more.  I ran for the State Representative seat on a platform that was pretty simple.  I saw that Cranston was getting the short end of the stick in education, and I made it a priority to change that.  After being elected, I worked with my colleagues to sponsor a statewide funding formula for public schools that secured Cranston its fair share of state aid.  The additional $25 million in the past six years has been critical for our city’s future.  First and foremost, I want to continue to make a difference for my city where I have lived nearly my entire life.  As Speaker, I also have the ability to help shape our state’s economic policy.  I have relied on my experiences working with Cranston’s small businesses to take decisive action to improve Rhode Island’s tax structure and make our state friendlier to retirees.  It is also important to focus on keeping college graduates in Rhode Island and protecting the strong family bonds that make our state so special.     

5.  Who is your inspiration?  

My late father Anthony Mattiello has always been my inspiration.  He embodied the American Dream.  He moved to the U.S. from Grazzanise -- a small village near Naples, Italy – with no formal education and opened his own business, Mattiello Drilling & Blasting.  His team of laborers carved pathways through New England’s mountains to create federal and state highways.  His work ethic inspired me.  My first job, while in high school, was working with Dad and I loved every minute of it.  I would haul dynamite, repair machines, set up blasts, and oversee the office books.  While I helped after school, Dad worked day and night so I had the opportunity to attend La Salle Academy.  He believed education was the key to success in life.  After La Salle, he encouraged me to attend Boston College.  I wanted to be an accountant because of my office work with my Dad.  I remember how proud Dad was when I became the first person in my family to obtain a college degree.  Despite my interest in accounting, it was Dad who convinced me to stay in school and pursue a law degree. He saw an inherent self-reliance in the legal profession.  Although it would not be as back-breaking as his work, Dad believed that a legal career would always allow me to work for myself.  I graduated from Suffolk University School of Law, and then tapped into the self-determination my father instilled in me on his job sites and opened my own law practice. This led me on a path ten years ago to help my City of Cranston as a State Representative.  Like my father before me, I am trying to work hard and have the opportunity to build a better life for my two sons.  


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