Lynch Hits Frias for "Finding New Way to Use Revolving Door" in RI

GoLocalProv News Team

Lynch Hits Frias for "Finding New Way to Use Revolving Door" in RI

Former Dem Party Chair Bill Lynch currently serves as senior adviser to the party.
Bill Lynch has said that Republican Steve Frias, who is running against Speaker of the House Nicholas Mattiello in District 15 in Cranston, has "found a new way to use the revolving door."

Lynch, the former Democratic Party Chair and current senior adviser to the party, made the comments on Wednesday about Frias, who had previously worked at the state's Public Utilities Commission (PUC) before joining a private practice; Frias' wife is currently a lobbyist for the PUC. 

"Steve Frias walked out of the PUC, but not before he arranged for his wife to take his place.  He is now able to offer polluters and energy companies advice on how to work the regulatory system, all the while laying claim to the very real fact that he remains well-connected to the PUC because his wife is a key player there," said Lynch. "That's not only taking the revolving door to a whole other level, it sincerely calls into question his definition of conflict of interest."

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GoLocal had pointed out the PUC issue in "Ten Things to Know About the Frias," to which Frias said how he would handle the issue of his wife lobbying for the PUC if elected. 

“With my wife being [there], if there was anything involving the PUC, I’d probably recuse myself,” said Frias of how he would address the conflict if elected.

Lynch on Record

Steve Frias
Lynch noted that Frias ran twice unsuccessfully before, for State Senate on the East Side of Providence in 1992 and 1994. 

Lynch also went on to state that Frias was a "close friend and ally of former Cranston Mayor Steve Laffey...and received at least one coveted legal job from the city, representing Cranston in a 2003 lawsuit."

Said Lynch, "Frias eventually received a plum political appointment as legal counsel to the PUC, where he served for several years with the help of Governor Carcieri before leaving the PUC to take a position with a high-powered Boston law firm whose primary source of business is representing big energy firms before regulatory boards such as the PUC.  Interestingly enough, Frias' wife now serves as a deputy chief of legal services for the same agency, and in the same job that Frias held under Republican Governors."

"Steve Frias likes to consider himself the ultimate outsider, but the fact of the matter is, he has been running for office or working for the Republican Party since 1992," said Lynch. "He says he is running on an ethics reform platform, but his past suggests he has played the ultimate insider game to advance his career.  Steve Frias' record deserves scrutiny because who he says he is and what he's done are two very different things".


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