This Week Was Raimondo's Worst Week as Governor and It Has Long Term Implications

Analysis

This Week Was Raimondo's Worst Week as Governor and It Has Long Term Implications

Governor Gina Raimondo's week. See what happened, and the impact.
This week was Gina Raimondo’s worst week as Governor both substantively and maybe more importantly, long-term politically. She has had bad weeks before, as all Governor do, but this week the fragility of her policies and her political acumen were exposed — the long-term impact may be significant both to the state financially and to her political future.

Each of the events tie Raimondo closer to the perception that she sides with wealthy and powerful out-of-state forces over the interests of Rhode Islanders, a label that has been tagged on the former venture capitalist who seems more comfortable at Wall Street Fundraisers on Central Park West than at the Columbus Day parade on Federal Hill.

1) Notorious Slumlord Receives $3.6 Million

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Raimondo spearheaded charge to funnel $3.6 million dollars to Lance Robbin’s company. He was reported to be one of the most notorious slumlords in Los Angeles for decades, but moved his operations across the country. GoLocal uncovered lawsuits in North Carolina and Connecticut and a number of small business owners in Rhode Island claiming that Robbins has damaged their businesses.

One of the top advocacy lawyers in the country, Lauren Saunders, told GoLocalProv.com following the announcement on Tuesday, “Robbins was one of the most dishonest and unscrupulous people I have come across in my career working for vulnerable tenants and consumers. I cannot imagine entrusting any (public) money to him.”

Saunders, who is now Associate Director of the National Consumer Law Center in Washington, DC, had battled with Robbins when she represented tenants in Los Angeles, where Robbins operated before relocating to Rhode Island.

2) White Flag by Magaziner on Raimondo’s Hedge Fund Strategy

Earlier this week, Seth Magaziner announced a new "Back to Basics" investment strategy for the Rhode Island pension fund, following unanimous approval by the State Investment Commission.

The recalibration will reduce its investment in the hedge fund strategies that Raimondo implemented as General Treasurer. Magaziner will move more than $500 million over the next two years, and reallocate these funds to more traditional asset classes. The move locks in the losses of the fund and is functionally an admission the Raimondo’s strategy was fatally flawed.

The failure of Raimondo's’s hedge funds will ensure a requirement of greater contribution of existing state workers and the state to hold the line on the unfunded liability.  

3) Raimondo’s Favorite Hedge Fund Pleads to Massive Global Fraud

If Magaziner’s rejection of her investment strategy was not bad enough, the Securities and Exchange Commission hit Och-Ziff, Raimondo’s favorite hedge fund with more than $400 million in penalties. Och-Ziff received more fee income from Raimondo’s tenure as Treasurer than any other hedge fund.

The SEC’s investigation of Och-Ziff found that the fund "used intermediaries, agents, and business partners to pay bribes to high-level government officials in Africa.  According to the SEC’s order, the illicit payments induced the Libyan Investment Authority sovereign wealth fund to invest in Och-Ziff managed funds.  Other bribes were paid to secure mining rights and corruptly influence government officials in Libya, Chad, Niger, Guinea, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.”

The SEC reported, “Och-Ziff engaged in complicated, far-reaching schemes to get special access and secure significant deals and profits through corruption,” said Andrew J. Ceresney, Director of the SEC Enforcement Division.

The SEC action again goes to reinforce the unholy alliance between Raimondo and Wall Street interests.

Owning 38 Studios

Raimondo who had limited culpability on the 38 Studios debacle, but is now putting her own signature on it by pursuing a strategy of delay and blocking the effort of GoLocalProv to gain access to the State Police interviews and corresponding notes via the public access strategy in Rhode Island. Instead of taking on the role of the reformer and leading transparency, the Governor seems trapped in a swirl of legal advice from those who may have vested interests.

Talk the Talk

The pay gap between men and women on Governor Gina Raimondo’s staff has grown dramatically over her first eighteen months in office  — from 14 percent to now a gap of 25 percent. She is Rhode Island's first female Governor.

In January of 2015, GoLocalProv.com looked at the pay of the men and women on Raimondo’s staff and found that despite her campaigning on the pay equity issue, the examination of staff salaries found that the gap was 14%.

Eighteen month later, the fifteen men on Raimondo’s staff have an average salary of $96,892 while the average salary for the twenty women staffers is just $72,535.

Parsing the Politics

GOP party chair Brandon Bell: "This is the worst week for our Governor (arguably) since the Cooler Warmer debacle."
"Governor Raimondo wants people to think she is an investment whiz but her hedge fund picks turned out to be losers.  The Governor's approach to picking hedge fund managers to control pension funds was financially unsound from day one. I don't know why it took the General Treasurer so long to figure this out. But better late than never, and we commend the General Treasurer for the political courage to recognize the Governor's Wall Street crony hedge fund folly," said Rhode Island Republican Party Chair Brandon Bell. 

"Additionally, one of the beneficiaries of her corporate welfare program at the Commerce Corp has an unsavory background.  Granting tax credits to a developer with a questionable reputation is an example of Raimondo and CommerceRI corporate cronyism," said Bell. "These types of decisions could be planting the seeds of RI tax major ethical embarrassment. Instead of making the structural reforms to make RI more competitive, the Raimondo Administration is making problematic tax deals that working families will have to pay for with no guarantee of a bright economic future for their children.  The Rhode Island Republican Party is monitoring these corporate welfare deals and will make them a issue in the next gubernatorial election."

Sam Bell with the Rhode Island Progressive Democrats of America said he thought Raimondo's week was "mixed."

"I don't think it's her worst week.  Raimondo has had a lot of bad weeks.  Actually, this week saw Raimondo come out with a decent minor policy proposal (the open textbooks initiative), which was a rare change for an administration with relatively few common-sense non-ideological proposals.  Certainly, it was bad news for her that Seth Magaziner rolled back her disastrous hedge fund push, but it was good news for Rhode Island.  Reversing some of Raimondo's failed policies will lead to better economic performance, which will probably help her approvals in the long run," said Bell. 

"More concerning for her is the yet another scandal from the controversial agency that did the 38 Studios deal, which Raimondo drastically expanded.  The heavy focus on payments for politically connected corporations is one of the most concerning aspects of Raimondo's tenure.  This new scandal only underscores how important it is for Rhode Island to change course and adopt a Massachusetts-style economic development program that doesn't rely so heavily on payments," continued Bell. "Raimondo's refusal to support release of the 38 Studios documents reveals an administration concerned about public scrutiny of corporate welfare deals, which makes sense from a strategy perspective.  Despite a well-run professional PR operation, public concern over these corporate welfare deals is growing, and increased scrutiny may lead to yet more calls for a policy rethink."


Lance Robbins Controversies Through the Years

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