Moore: A Mattiello Defeat May Be a Hollow Victory for GOP

Russell J. Moore GoLocal MINDSETTER™

Moore: A Mattiello Defeat May Be a Hollow Victory for GOP

Nicholas Mattiello
If anyone needed proof that House Speaker Nicholas Mattiello is in a tight race to retain the District-15 seat that he currently occupies, last week should have been enough evidence to convince us that Steven Frias is making his presence felt.

First, Mattiello announced that in the next legislative session, assuming he’s reelected, he’ll pass legislation to significantly cut the car tax across Rhode Island. Mattiello also said that he would support legislation to increase the exemption on the estate tax, lifting it from $1.5 million to $2 million. Ultimately, the Speaker said that he’d like to see the car tax and the estate tax eliminated completely.

Those legislative priorities have long been goals of the Rhode Island Republican Party. For Mattiello to adopt them as his own seems like a nod to conservative voters in his district. It looks like an attempt to shave support off of Frias’ base.  

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What was more disconcerting were Mattiello’s comments about 38 Studios. The House Speaker looked desperate as he tried to somehow blame Frias for the massive squandering of taxpayer dollars on an ill-fated deal. The Speaker used tortured logic to argue that Frias was somehow an advisor to Carcieri and therefore deserved blame for the nightmare.

Car Tax Talk

All the Speaker did was remind us that he was the House Majority Leader when the loan guaranty program that paved the way for 38 Studios was passed—and he voted for it. Let’s not forget: it was really the brainchild of former House Speaker Gordon Fox and his cronies. Former Governor Donald Carcieri went along with it, (and showed no leadership) but he wasn’t the one leading the charge.

Mattiello, for his part, claims he was duped throughout the process, despite the fact that he was the Majority Leader of the House. That doesn’t exactly bode well for his brand of leadership.

Let’s face it: Mattiello didn’t exactly look as if he was playing with a big lead last week.

Yet while that may be the case, conservatives need to take a step back and take a wider view of this situation. The fact that Mattiello may very well lose this election begs the question of whether a Mattiello loss would be a positive development for the conservative movement in Rhode Island.

The Devil You Know

I have to say: maybe not.  Mattiello is not without his faults. He is the man who spearheaded the new tolling plan through the state legislature. He also has an affinity for the good ole boy network that has ruled Rhode Island for decades.

That being said, he has delivered some good government reforms that other leaders throughout the state haven’t.

Without Mattiello’s leadership, state voters wouldn’t be able to reinstate the power of the Rhode Island Ethics Commission over the General Assembly this year—which I’m desperately hoping they will.

Further, it was under Mattiello’s speakership that the archaic master lever was removed. Ironically, the removal of the master lever might hurt Mattiello in his race, though that’s more unlikely in his district which seems to be evenly split between Democrats and Republicans judging by the 2012 election results.

Mattiello also has cut taxes on social security benefits—a conservative approach to boosting the economy.

Good Government Reforms

Also, conservatives need to realize that oftentimes, the Speaker you know is often not as bad as the Speaker you don’t know. For instance, there’s a distinct possibility that should Mattiello fall, a progressive—like Chris Blazejewski, for instance—may rise up and take what many believe is the top job in Rhode Island government. Given that so many progressives won primaries in September, that’s not too farfetched of a reality.

These facts make me think that conservatives best think twice about gloating over a potential Mattiello loss. It may make things much worse instead of better.

Russell J. Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in Rhode Island media, both for newspapers and on political campaigns. Send him email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter @russmoore713. 

Mattiello and Frias - June 2016

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