New Year, New Chair for State GOP
North Kingstown's Mark Zaccaria took over at the chair of the Rhode Island Republican Party last month.
It’s been a year in flux for the Rhode Island Republican Party. Last March, Ken McKay of North Kingstown took the reins as head of the state’s GOP party, only to resign eight months into his two-year term and take a position with Wisconsin Senator Ron Johnson in Washington, D.C. Now, another North Kingstown resident is stepping into his shoes.
Though Zaccaria, 62, fell to Rep. James Langevin in 2010, Zaccaria beat out RI Republican Assembly President Raymond McKay and newcomer Tina McKendall in a three-way race for position of chair on Dec. 21. With an election less than 10 months away, Zaccaria looks to have his hands full.
One of Zaccaria’s primary duties is raising funds for Republican political campaigns. In a Democrat dominated state, putting together competitive and well-funded campaigns has proven to be a trying task.
“We have a couple of advantages this year,” said Zaccaria. “One of which is the dissent on the other side of the aisle.”
Zaccaria hopes to reap the benefits of that dissent and augment the state’s GOP presence in the General Assembly. Of the 113 members of the state’s legislature, only 18 are Republican – eight in the Senate and 10 in the House. Zaccaria’s goal is to boost that number to 45. To do that, Zaccaria says many long-standing incumbents must fall.
“The landscape for representatives in Rhode Island has been an impenetrable phalanx of incumbents,” said Zaccaria.
For Zaccaria, Doreen Costa’s underdog win over 18-year incumbent Ken Carter in the 2010 election is proof that it can be done.
“Ken Carter’s defeat at the hands of Doreen Costa proved that a message of energy and fiscal responsibility works for Rhode Island voters,” said Zaccaria. “That is a microcosm of what we need to do.”
The state GOP looks to offer more services and aid to candidates this year, including training sessions (the first of which will be held in North Kingstown on Jan. 21), polling, telephone banks and assistance with lawn signs, palm cards and other materials.
Things got off to a rocky start for the new chair, however. Steven Farias, the party’s acting chair following the departure of McKay, discovered that the RIGOP’s most recent filings with the Federal Election Commission and the Rhode Island Board of Elections were incorrect. An internal audit discovered discrepancies going back as far as 2002 – discrepancies that made it appear that the party had tens of thousands of dollar more than what it actually had in its coffers. Zaccaria attributes the $45,000-discrepancy to “human error” and that the final amount in the party’s coffers is about $32,000.
“We noticed a problem, we faced it and we fixed it,” said Zaccaria, adding that he doubts were will be any punitive action from the FEC.
Zaccaria’s ascension as head of the state’s GOP party comes just more than 12 years after he and his family moved to Rhode Island. The Massachusetts native and Colby College graduate was commissioned into the Air Force in 1970 and became a flight instructor toward the tail end of the Vietnam War. Though never deployed to Vietnam, Zaccaria had his fair share of travels, including Texas where he met his wife Ruth, who was stationed there as a medical officer. After decades of traveling around for work, Zaccaria and his family settled down in North Kingstown in 1999.
Accustomed to moving around and acclimating to new towns, the Zaccarias formulated a to-do list: within a week, they joined the North Kingstown United Methodist Church and the North Kingstown Republican Town Committee. The following year, Ruth tested the political waters and ran against Ken Carter for a seat in the General Assembly, eventually losing out to the longtime incumbent.
In 2002, Zaccaria was appointed to the North Kingstown Town Council, replacing Robin Porter who left to seek statewide office. In 2004, Zaccaria was elected to a full term.
Zaccaria now leaves his position as chair of the North Kingstown GOP, a position he has held for less than a year. Next month, the committee will elect its new chair at its February meeting.
“I think I received the NKGOP in good condition and I think I left it in better condition,” said Zaccaria. “If my successor can say the same thing, I think that’s quite an accomplishment.”
NKGOP Watch
1:25 pm on Monday, January 16, 2012
THIS CLOWN PROUDLY PLACED A HALLEY SIGN IN HIS LAWN LAST ELECTION. Corruption is A-OK with Zaccaria as long as it's someone who plays nice on him. Sad.
Mike
8:30 am on Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Good luck Mark. We need some choices in this state vice the corrupt politicians that have been draining this state dry for decades. One example--the change to the state income tax this year that gives the rich relief (Reed, Whitehouse, et al.) and increases taxes on the RI middle class. Say one thing, do another....
NKGOP Watch
11:50 am on Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Yeah "mike" this HALLEY SUPPORTER who wanted JIM HALLEY to get elected to office, shows a real alternative to corruption. LOLOLOLOL
Mike
12:30 pm on Tuesday, January 17, 2012
Your point? That people aren't perfect? That people make mistakes? That both parties have some corrupt politicians within? If so, I agree. But this isn't a vote on Halley, though you seem obsessed with this individual. I want ballot choices this November--some good people I can send to both the State and Fed level that will represent the people vice the RI staus quo of spend more/raise taxes. You should too.
NKGOP Watch
10:33 pm on Tuesday, January 17, 2012
No one here is obsessed with any individual. It's about choice, and values. Mike do you support Rep. Doreen Costa and do you feel she is honest and of the right approach to get RI back on track if possible?
Mike
8:24 am on Wednesday, January 18, 2012
I met her. She wants spending controlled and accoountability. She is passionate and appears to walk her talk. If she continues to, I will support her. Better than the continued slide into bankruptcy and educational malaise.
jeff
9:10 am on Wednesday, January 18, 2012
You should look at her record, not just listen to her passion. What I recall is she was in favor of removing a requirement for bus monitors, which would potentially save towns money, but withdrew support when she realized people would lose jobs. You can't cut spending without people losing jobs. I don't recall any other legislation she sponsored (I could be wrong here). She also called Bob Watson "family" and gave him her support when he was stopped for OUI and possession in Connecticut, before withdrawing that support. She also got a ton of press for criticizing the Governor over the "holiday/christmas" tree flap. But what has she actually done as a legislator?
NKGOP Watch
11:17 pm on Wednesday, January 18, 2012
She has done a LOT as a legislator, despite that pinheaded 'editorial' in the NE Independent. For one thing, I understand that Doreen has attended every car tax reform meeting. Have YOU attended ANY?
As to backing down on the bus monitor issue, the public outcry changed her mind, so if the voters want to find savings someplace else, she respected that. I still think the bus driver camera system can do the same safety of the kids leaving the bus, but the public favored keeping monitors and Doreen respected that. How nice!