RI GOP’s Leading Latino Speaks Out on Trump and the Future of the Party in RI

Thursday, August 17, 2017

 

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Luis Vargas

In a sweeping interview Luis Vargas, the leading Latino Republican in Rhode Island, harshly criticized President Donald Trump for his position on white supremacists, Nazis, and the KKK and what the GOP needs to do to win in RI.

Vargas almost pulled off the ultimate upset in 2016 when he nearly upset sitting Representative Joe Almeida in Providence. He ran as an Independent.

More recently, Vargas has been helping Mike Smith in his race for the now vacant Senate seat in Newport/Jamestown — District 13 and he just began law school at Roger Williams University.

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For Rhode Island Republicans to win in the future, the party will need to develop candidates and messages that reach a broader group of Rhode Islanders. From 1984 to 2010, the governor's office in Rhode Island was held by Republicans except for four-years (Democrat Bruce Sundlun 1991 to 1995).

 

 

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President Donald Trump

On Trump

Vargas said, “No, there were not good people protesting in Charlottesville. There were neo-nazis, white nationalists... A domestic terrorist who ran his car into a crowd of protesters. The President’s comments were embarrassing, unpresidential, but I can not honestly say that they were surprising. There is a pattern of ridiculous statements coming from this President, and it is very troubling.”

Vargas has been one of the only Rhode Island Republicans to take on Trump’s comments.

 “If I could speak with the President I would say this: You were elected to do a job. Do that job, do it with respect, do it with civility, and do it with class. Instead of whining and arguing with your detractors, focus on putting people back to work and strengthening families,” said Vargas. 

“Golf less, tweet less, and listen to the advice of those around you, who I am sure are tired of watching you damage the party and country’s reputation,” he added.

 

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Brandon Bell with Steve Frias on Election Night, 2016

GOP Chair’s Refusal to Speak Out

 

While GOP Chair has refused to comment on Trump’s comments about Charlottesville, Vargas urged Bell and other leading Republicans to speak out. “There can be no lukewarm statements. There is no good neo-nazi and there is no good white nationalist - they are antithetical to what so many Americans fought and gave their lives for.”

"Brandon Bell has been nothing but welcoming to me and to my initiatives for outreach - he genuinely wants to see the party grow across demographics and to help lift up the average Rhode Islander," said Vargas. 

 

Future of the GOP

 

Presently, the GOP fails to hold one statewide elected office nor any of the four congressional seats. Democrats hold the top nine offices. 

“The RIGOP needs to get the message out that this is not the party of Trump. The RIGOP is so much more than one person, and it needs to focus on good government, training hardworking candidates who serve their community, and on not simply ringing the bell when Governor Raimondo makes a mistake each week (and there are several),” said Vargas. “The RIGOP needs  to make an earnest effort to distance itself from divisive rhetoric, to invest more in candidates and to speak out on every issue for what is right and good.”

 

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RI GOP - what is the future

Defending Bell

Over the past few days, GOP Chair Bell has refused to answer questions about Trump’s comments and the 2016 election season was a disappointment for the RI GOP.

“I don’t think Brandon Bell is out of step with Rhode Islanders. He is a great spokesperson for the RIGOP who has echoed the sentiment of working Rhode Island taxpayers for years on good government, public corruption, and economic issues. He inherited a dysfunctional party and it has not gotten much better, but I don’t doubt that most Rhode Islanders agree with the message the RIGOP is espousing,” said Vargas.

 

Related Slideshow: Rhode Island Gubernatorial Portraits, 1775-2015

Check out the slideshow of every existing portrait of Governors of Rhode Island, dating back to 1775.

There are no official portraits for John Collins (served 1786-1790), Henry Smith (served 1805-1806), Isaac Wilbour (served 1806-1807), Charles Jackson (served 1845-1846), and George P Wetmore (served 1885-1887).

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Nicholas Cooke

Years in Office 1775-1778

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William Greene

Years in Office 1778-1786

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Arthur Fenner

Years in Office 1790-1805

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James Fenner

Years in Office 1807-1811

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William Jones

Years in Office 1811-1817

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Nehemiah R. Knight

Years in Office 1817-1821

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William C. Gibbs

Years in Office 1821-1824

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James Fenner

Years in Office 1824-1831

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Lemuel H. Arnold

Years in Office 1831-1833

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John B. Francis

Years in Office 1833-1838

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William Sprague III

Years in Office 1838-1839

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Samuel Ward King

Years in Office 1839-1843

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Thomas Dorr

Years in Office 1839-1843 (extralegal)

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James Fenner

Years in Office 1843-1845

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Byron Diman

Years in Office 1846-1847

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Elisha Harris

Years in Office 1847-1849

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Henry B. Anthony

Years in Office 1849-1851

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Philip Allen

Years in Office 1851-1853

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Francis M. Dimond

Years in Office 1853-1854

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William W. Hoppin

Years in Office 1854-1857

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Elisha Dyer

Years in Office 1857-1859

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Thomas G. Turner

Years in Office 1859-1860

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William Sprague IV

Years in Office 1860-1863

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William C Cozzens

Year in Office 1863

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James Y. Smith

Years in Office 1863-1867

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Ambrose Everett Burnside

Years in Office 1867-1869

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Seth Padelford

Years in Office 1869-1873

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Henry Howard

Years in Office 1873-1875

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Henry Lippitt

Years in Office 1875-1877

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Charles C. Van Zandt

Years in Office 1877-1880

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Alfred H. Littlefield

Years in Office 1880-1883

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Augustus O. Bourn

Years in Office 1883-1885

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John W. Davis

Years in Office 1887-1888

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Royal C. Taft

Years in Office 1888-1889

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Herbert W. Ladd

Years in Office 1889-1890

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John W. Davis

Years in Office 1890–1891

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Herbert W. Ladd

Years in Office 1891–1892

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D. Russell Brown

Years in Office 1892–1895

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Charles W. Lippitt

Years in Office 1895-1897

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Elisha Dyer, Jr.

Years in Office 1897-1900

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William Gregory

Years in Office 1900-1901

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Charles D. Kimball

Years in Office 1901-1903

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Lucius F. C. Garvin

Years in Office 1903-1905

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George H. Utter

Years in Office 1905-1907

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James H. Higgins

Years in Office 1907-1909

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Aram J. Pothier

Years in Office 1907-1915

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R. Livingston Beeckman

Years in Office 1915-1921

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Emery J. San Souci

Years in Office 1921-1923

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William S. Flynn

Years in Office 1923-1925

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Aram J. Pothier

Years in Office 1925-1928

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Norman S. Case

Years in Office 1928-1933

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Theodore Francis Green

Years in Office 1933-1937

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Robert E. Quinn

Years in Office 1937-1939

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William Henry Vanderbilt

Years in Office 1939-1941

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J. Howard McGrath

Years in Office 1941-1945

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John Orlando Pastore

Years in Office 1945-1950

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John S. McKiernan

Years in Office 1950-1951

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Dennis J. Roberts

Years in Office 1951-1959

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Christopher Del Sesto

Years in Office 1959-1961

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John A. Notte, Jr.

Years in Office 1961-1963

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John Hubbard Chafee

Years in Office 1963-1969

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Frank Licht

Years in Office 1969-1973

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Philip W Noel

Years in Office 1973-1977

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J. Joseph Garrahy

Years in Office 1977-1985

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Edward D. DiPrete

Years in Office 1985-1991

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Bruce Sundlun

Years in Office 1991-1995

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Lincoln C. Almond

Years in Office 1995-2003

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Donald Carcieri

Years in Office 2003-2011

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Lincoln Chafee

Years in Office 2011-2015

 
 

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