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Joe Markley rebukes Southington Republicans in stunning video. “Party does not deserve to lead if it endorses candidates who cannot be trusted.”

Former state senator and 2018 Republican nominee for lieutenant governor Joe Markley has dealt a blow to mindless political tribalism in Southington. Markley released a riveting and reasoned 10 minute YouTube video in which he calmly, thoroughly explains the abandonment of all standards of appropriate conduct in the leadership of the Southington party leadership.

Markley brings his customary calm married to a precise statement of facts to delivering a devastating indictment of local party leaders. One need not live in Southington to find the video instructive.

This is how it is done.

Published October 10, 2023.

October 10, 2023   6:41 pm   Comments Off on Joe Markley rebukes Southington Republicans in stunning video. “Party does not deserve to lead if it endorses candidates who cannot be trusted.”

Bridgeport Democratic mayor primary trial to begin October 12th.

Superior Court Judge Willam Clark has issued a pre-trial order. Evidence shall begin at 10 a.m. on Thursday, October 12th. The order requires the plaintiff to provide a list of exhibits and witnesses for the first three days of trial by October 10th.

October 4, 2023   4:50 pm   Comments Off on Bridgeport Democratic mayor primary trial to begin October 12th.

Ronnell Higgins to lead DESPP as commissioner. Colonel Mellekas out too.

Governor Ned Lamont will appoint Ronnell Higgins, former Chief of Police at Yale University as the state’s new Commissioner of the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection (DESPP). Higgins became associate vice president of public safety and community engagement at Yale last year.

The announcement Wednesday that Higgins will replace Commissioner James Rovella has been carefully timed to draw a line under more revelations about conduct in the ranks of the State Police.

Colonel Stavros Mellekas is also expected to be replaced.

The State Police has been a nettlesome problem for Lamont. Republican Bob Stefanowski had only one line in his 2018 rematch with Lamont that irked the Greenwich Democrat. It was troopers’ vote of no-confidence in Lamont. That sealed Rovella’s fate. An ongoing scandal over motor vehicle tickets continues to cause dismay within the administration. More unhappy surprises are expected to follow–and you won’t need your GPS to track them.

Published October 4, 2023.

For something completely differ, read and subscribe to my Substack newsletter, Now You Know–The Cultural Lives of Others. This week’s guest is Army Veteran and Digital Dunkirk leader Alex Plitsas.

October 4, 2023   11:42 am   Comments Off on Ronnell Higgins to lead DESPP as commissioner. Colonel Mellekas out too.

Exclusive: New video of Gomes supporters at Bridgeport absentee ballot boxes show Judge Clark’s challenge in primary result dispute.

Video of candidates and John Gomes supporters placing ballots in two Bridgeport absentee boxes provide a sample of the bewildering amount of evidence Superior Court Judge William Clark is likely to see in the litigation over the result of the September 12th Democratic primary for mayor.

The results are being challenged by Gomes, who claims incumbent Joseph Ganim’s 251-vote win was obtained through fraudulent absentee ballots. Members of Team Gomes are seen in a video compilation depositing ballots in two of the city’s four absentee ballot boxes.

Thousands of hours of video have been provided to the Gomes legal team. Thousands of absentee ballot applications, envelopes and ballots have also been turned over to the parties. Bridgeport police officials have objected to some disclosures ordered by Judge Clark. They claim they would interfere with an ongoing investigation.

Published October 3, 2023.

Read and subscribe to my new Substack newsletter, Now You Know–The Cultural Lives of Others. This week’s edition features Army veteran and Afghan Digital Dunkirk leader Alex Plitsas.

October 3, 2023   9:42 am   Comments Off on Exclusive: New video of Gomes supporters at Bridgeport absentee ballot boxes show Judge Clark’s challenge in primary result dispute.

Head winds: Avangrid terminates Park City offshore power agreement.

Avangrid, which aspires to become “the leading sustainable energy company in the United States,” has terminated its agreement to build wind power turbines in Long Island Sound. The announcement came from the Connecticut-based company Monday evening.

The company, with $41 billion in assets and operations in 24 states, wrote:

“One year ago, Avangrid was the first offshore wind developer in the United States to make public the unprecedented economic headwinds facing the industry including record inflation, supply chain disruptions, and sharp interest rate hikes, the aggregate impact of which rendered the Park City Wind project unfinanceable under its existing contracts.

“Since that time, Avangrid has been transparent and collaborative, working diligently with state and federal officials and stakeholders to find solutions to the economic challenges facing Park City Wind as we continued to advance the permitting and development of the project. After exploring all potential solutions to the financial challenges facing the project, and engaging in good-faith and productive discussions with Connecticut state officials regarding these challenges, it is clear the best path forward for Park City Wind is in the termination of the Power Purchase Agreements and a rebid of the project.

“Pursuant to the contracts, Avangrid and the Connecticut Electric Distribution Companies have agreed to terminate the PPAs which will allow all parties an opportunity to pursue an expedient path forward.”

The CT Mirror provided a primer on the Park City project and the state of wind power development generally last spring. Read it here.

Published October 3, 2023.

For something completely different, read my Substack newsletter, Now You Know–The Cultural Lives of Others. This week’s guest is Army veteran and Digital Dunkirk refugee leader Alex Plitsas.

October 3, 2023   8:56 am   Comments Off on Head winds: Avangrid terminates Park City offshore power agreement.

The astonishing pettiness of the Middletown Common Council. Mewling members complain police chief rents.

Middletown’s distinctive brand of politics is in full view Monday evening. Some members of the Common Council continue to complain that Chief of Police Erik Costa has not met the city charter’s requirement that he live in Middletown—as Costa’s one year extension to meet the requirement expires this week.

Costa has rented an apartment, establishing his residency. The mewling continues among some council members. Their arguments require translation into Middletown-speak. the Common Council groans under the influence of retired members of the clubby local constabulary. Costa is an outside hire. That sets off alarms among the many Middletown insiders who like the chief to come from the ranks of the insider caucus.

Apartment dwellers are residents too. They enjoy all the rights invested in those who live in single family homes.

Former state budget director Melissa McCaw rented an apartment in Hartford when she was that city’s finance director and was required to be a city resident. Her husband and children did not move to Hartford with her. Middletown has not been home to an official as powerful as McCaw for years. She left the Lamont administration in early 2022 for a fresh start in East Hartford.

Before council members contort the plain meaning of in pursuit of their petty agenda they might ask each other, ”Are our spouses residents of Middletown?”

Published October 2, 2023.

October 2, 2023   6:42 pm   Comments Off on The astonishing pettiness of the Middletown Common Council. Mewling members complain police chief rents.

On maneuvers: Fonfara strengthens his role in Hartford’s future with appointment to MIRA Dissolution Authority.

State Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff (D-Norwalk) this week appointed his colleague state Senator John Fonfara (D-Hartford) to the MIRA Dissolution Authority. The appointment came 15 days after Fonfara received the fewest votes of the three candidates competing in Hartford’s Democratic primary for mayor.

The appointment will give Fonfara enhanced influence in determining what role the 80-acre former trash-to-energy plant site can play in the development of Hartford’s South Meadows. The new agency will have until July 1, 2026 to complete its tasks.

With Fonfara, who retains his influential position as co-chair of the legislature’s finance committee, on the MIRA Dissolution Authority, the new administration will discover how diffuse power in Hartford can often be, the staying power of discontent and there are substantive ways to “believe in Hartford” that transcend campaign slogans.

William DiBella memorably told an incensed legislator the Hartford Democrat outmaneuvered on a committee vote, “I’m not here to give you a civics lesson.” School is back in session. The lesson is the same, only the instructor has changed.

Published September 29, 2023.

September 29, 2023   3:44 pm   Comments Off on On maneuvers: Fonfara strengthens his role in Hartford’s future with appointment to MIRA Dissolution Authority.

Logan to announce second bid for Congress Monday.

Former Republican state Senator George Logan will launch his second bid for the 5th Congressional District on Monday, October 2nd. Logan teased the announcement Wednesday on Twitter.

If Republicans nominate Logan, the contest will be a rematch with third-term incumbent Democrat Jahana Hayes. Logan lost to Hayes in 2022 by a little under 2,000 votes. The former two-term state legislator moved from his Ansonia home in the 3rd Congressional District to a residence in Meriden, putting him in the 5th. Logan continues to own his home in Ansonia but has registered a German luxury car in Meriden.

Logan took a drubbing in the Farmington Valley, once a reliable source of Republican votes. Logan unfurled his colors as a supporter of Donald Trump when one of the twice-impeached former president’s prominent lickspittles, Representative Elise Stefanik, headlined a Greenwich fundraiser for him. Logan will travel to the heart of Q-Anon country Monday to make his announcement in Watertown—home to the state’s highest ranking openly Q-Anon supporter, state Senator Eric Berthel.

Logan is expected to devote himself full-time in this campaign sooner than he did in 2022. Continuing to work for Eversource subsidiary Aquarian far into the last campaign may have made a difference in the outcome of the election.

Republicans in and out of the district are waiting for ESPN broadcaster Sage Steele, of Avon, to decide if she will enter contest.

Published September 27, 2023.

For something completely different, read and subscribe to Now You Know—The Cultural Lives of Others. This week’s guest is acclaimed actress Maureen Anderman.

September 27, 2023   6:48 pm   Comments Off on Logan to announce second bid for Congress Monday.

Judge expects to begin evidence in Bridgeport absentee ballot dispute during the week of 10/6.

Superior Court Judge William Clark issued an order Monday stating that he “expects to schedule evidence to begin during the week of October 6, 2023, or as soon thereafter as practicable, and to continue daily until complete, subject to logistical adjustments as necessary and as approved by the court.”

Because Connecticut holds municipal primaries in mid-September, challenges to the result require parties and courts to engage in intense and timely reviews of a challenge for the November general election. Courts are reluctant to postpone election dates because doing so can reduce voter turnout.

Plaintiff John Gomes and his team will need to immerse itself in thousands of hours of video recordings and review thousands of absentee ballot applications, the ballots themselves and the envelopes they arrived in. It is tedious but essential work. The ballots themselves were separated from the other documents when they were counted on September 12th.

Gomes and Ganim are both on the ballot for the November 7th contest for mayor. Ganim would enjoy an advantage over Gomes if he is the Democratic nominee for mayor.

Published September 26, 2023.

For something completely different than the battle of Bridgeport ballots, read this week’s edition of Now You Know–The Cultural Lives of Others. This week’s guest is acclaimed actress Maureen Anderman, a happy Connecticut resident.

September 26, 2023   12:40 pm   Comments Off on Judge expects to begin evidence in Bridgeport absentee ballot dispute during the week of 10/6.

Blumenthal and Murphy took money from Menendez PAC.

Senators Richard Blumenthal and Christopher Murphy each accepted generous contributions from the PAC of their indicted colleague, Senator Robert Menendez, a New Jersey Democrat. Blumenthal received $10,000, presumably by check, from New Millennium PAC for his 2022 re-election campaign, according to Opensecrets.com.

Murphy received $7,500 from his fellow Democrat’s PAC for his 2018 campaign for a second term.

Blumenthal, who has nurtured a reputation for rectitude, accepted the Menendez maximum contribution after Menendez escaped conviction for corruption when a federal jury deadlocked in 2017. The Senate Ethics Committee admonished Menendez in 2018 because he “knowingly and repeatedly accepted gifts of significant value from” a doctor he used his position to assist.

Menendez was represented before the committee by Marc Elias.

Neither Blumenthal nor Murphy have called on Menendez to resign after he and his wife were indicted for accepting bribes that included “cash, gold bars, payments toward a home mortgage, compensation for a low-or-no-show job, a luxury vehicle and other items of value.”

In 2012, the Menendez PAC contributed $7,500 to Dan Roberti’s losing primary campaign in Connecticut’s Fifth Congressional District. Roberti was defeated by Elizabeth Esty. She went on to serve three terms in the House but ignoring a chilling case of harassment in her office caused her to abandon her bid for a fourth term in 2018.

The Menendez PAC also contributed $5,000 to Rep. John Larson in 2012, though he faced no serious opposition.

Blumenthal could have afforded to be more discriminating in soliciting and accepting contributions. Tribal loyalties cannot have blinded him to what Menendez is. But the instinct to grab every buck he can in an easy re-election campaign caused Blumenthal to abandon the standards he’s spent 40 years trying to convince the public he would always honor. For $10,000? Because he was worried Themis Klarides or Leora Levy might come within 10 points of him?

Blumenthal, Murphy and Larson might do the decent thing and engage in some contribution washing by divesting their never ending campaign committees of the amounts they received from Menendez but it won’t change the rules of the game to take whatever they can from whomever offers it.

Published September 25, 2023.

For something completely different, read and subscribe to Now You Know—The Cultural Lives of Others. This week’s guest is actress Maureen Anderman.

September 25, 2023   10:26 pm   Comments Off on Blumenthal and Murphy took money from Menendez PAC.