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Jeane Kirkpatrick delivers one of the 20th century’s greatest speeches on the first night of the 1984 Republican National Convention–to a party that no longer exists.

On August 20, 1984, Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick delivered one of the greatest speeches of the 20th century at the first night of the Republican National Convention. Ambassador Kirkpatrick, a Democrat, represented the United States at the United Nations, doing battle for freedom.

The speech became famous for its refrain of San Francisco Democrats (where the party had held its convention) always blaming America first. It was, the Democrat Kirkpatrick began, the first Republican convention she had ever attended. In 20 minutes for the ages, Kirkpatrick explained the world to the world. She was liberty’s Boudica.

On this grim day, Donald Trump announced a running mate who will join him constantly denigrating America and portraying the blessings of freedom as the elements of a dystopian nightmare. Today, no one would be invited to deliver a speech like Kirkpatrick’s enduring masterpiece.

“We need friends and allies with whom to share the pleasures and protections of our civilization. We cannot, therefore, be indifferent to the subversion of others’ independence,” the Georgetown professor declared, “or to the development of new weapons by our adversaries or of new vulnerabilities of our friends.”

Today, Republican delegates nominated Trump for the third time to lead their party into a presidential election. For the first time, they will nominate a running mate who called Trump “America’s Hitler.” “Bewildering” is inadequate to describe the obliteration of the Republican commitment to democratic values.

Jeane Kirkpatrick was a great tribune of truth 40 years ago, and that has not changed.

Published July 15, 2024.

July 15, 2024   Comments Off on Jeane Kirkpatrick delivers one of the 20th century’s greatest speeches on the first night of the 1984 Republican National Convention–to a party that no longer exists.

Turn that frown upside down with the greatest campaign song ever. Ever.

No wonder Republican John V. Lindsay won the 1965 campaign for mayor of New York. Stephen Sondheim wrote the Silk Stocking congressman’s theme song—and Ethel Merman recorded it in her singular style.

As Republican delegates head for Milwaukee to shame their names for generations and Democrats dither, revive your faltering spirits with this musical marvel.

Published July 12, 2024.

July 12, 2024   Comments Off on Turn that frown upside down with the greatest campaign song ever. Ever.

Trouble in Cannabis. Clay resigns as ED of Social Equity Council. Claims “unsubstantiated allegations, threats, and publicly leaked false narratives” marred final days.

“With a heavy heart,” Ginnie-Rae Clay has resigned as Executive Director of the Social Equity Council. Her last day on the job will be August 1st. She made her announcement by email Tuesday morning.

Clay makes serious claims in explaining her sudden decision. She wrote:

Regrettably, my final days in this role have been marred by unsubstantiated allegations, threats, and publicly leaked false narratives, all of which have unjustly called my character and integrity into question. Throughout life, one’s reputation is a cornerstone to be built and protected. To safeguard the reputation I have diligently cultivated, I find it necessary to conclude my tenure with the SEC at this juncture.

Concerns about the operation of the SEC prompted its board to halt making grants to eligible communities. The debate over that action revealed deep fractures among its members. The Office of the State Comptroller, at the request of Governor Ned Lamont, is conducting an audit of the cannabis program’s finances.

Earlier this year, Lamont appointed Andrea Comer to replace Paul O. Robertson as the head of the agency’s board.

Clay’s departure is not expected to be the conclusion of upheavals at SEC.

Published July 9, 2024.

July 9, 2024   Comments Off on Trouble in Cannabis. Clay resigns as ED of Social Equity Council. Claims “unsubstantiated allegations, threats, and publicly leaked false narratives” marred final days.

Connecticut Republicans Today: Congressional candidate joined Marjorie Taylor Greene in Danbury demonstration for Bannon.

Michael Massey is the Republican nominee for the House of Representatives from Connecticut’s Third Congressional District. On Monday, Massey joined conspiracy crazed nihilist Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia).

Massey traveled to Danbury to show support for Donald Trump ally and podcaster Steve Bannon as he reported to federal prison in Danbury to begin serving a four month sentence for contempt of Congress. The former Goldman Sachs investment banker and film producer used the opportunity to rail at the nation’s “ruling elite.” The Supreme Court declined to consider the 70 year old Harvard Business School graduate’s appeal to stay his sentence.

On his final day in office in 2021, Trump pardoned Bannon for all charges arising out of an alleged fraud scheme that duped donors into supporting Trump’s proposal to build a wall at the nation’s southern border. Bannon’s Danbury sentence arises from his refusal to comply with a subpoena from the House’s special committee investigating the January 6th attempt to prevent the House and Senate from counting and certifying the 2020 Electoral College votes.

Massey was inspired to become involved in politics, as he tells the tale, when he heard a Trump speech while serving a prison sentence for a 2008 armed robbery of a Naugatuck bank. He will face incumbent Democrat Rosa DeLauro, who is seeking her 13th term.

Published July 3, 2024.

July 3, 2024   Comments Off on Connecticut Republicans Today: Congressional candidate joined Marjorie Taylor Greene in Danbury demonstration for Bannon.

Lamont to make personnel decision: Dach out.

Governor Ned Lamont is expected to announce Tuesday morning that Jonathan Dach, Lamont’s third chief of staff, is leaving the administration, Daily Ructions has learned. The governor will appear at the State Capitol at 10:15 a.m. to make the announcement.

Dach has been with Lamont since the governor took office in 2019. He joined the administration as a top advisor and has continued in that role with different titles.

Matthew Brokman, also senior advisor, is expected to replace Dach. Brokman is considered politically savvy and his appointment will unleash a holiday week round of speculation on what the change means for the popular Lamont’s likelihood to seek a third term in 2026.

Dach’s departure and his replacement by Brokman will ease tensions in the executive suite.

Published July 2, 2024.

July 2, 2024   Comments Off on Lamont to make personnel decision: Dach out.

Twenty years ago today: John Rowland resigns as impeachment proceeding and federal criminal investigation revealed corruption.

On June 21, 2004, Governor John G. Rowland announced in a brief speech broadcast to the state from the Governor’s Residence that he would resign his office on July 1st. Rowland’s decision came as the legislature’s impeachment inquiry was growing closer to removing the three-term Republican from office.

At the same time, a federal criminal probe was gathering momentum. It would conclude with Rowland entering a guilty plea for corrupt practices six months later, on December 23rd.

The anniversary of the Rowland scandals provides a moment to reflect on the essential role a free press plays in reporting acts of the powerful to the public. Hartford Courant reporters Jon Lender, Dave Altimai and Ed Mahony were indispensable in altering the public and law enforcement officials to the betrayal of the public trust that came to mark the Rowland administration. While a hot tub and cabinets in a lakeside cottage came to symbolize the scandal, it was about much more. High ranking officials in Rowland’s office also went to prison for corruption, as did state contractor William Tomasso.

The far reaching scandal included revelations of gold coins and an attempt to persuade the Mark Twain House foundation to publish a children’s book.

Some learned lessons from the public ordeal, others did not. One that endures: subscribe to a newspaper that is not afraid to find and follow a trail.

Published June 21, 2024.

June 21, 2024   Comments Off on Twenty years ago today: John Rowland resigns as impeachment proceeding and federal criminal investigation revealed corruption.

NYC retirees upend union election over switch to Aetna Medicare Advantage dispute.

Retired teachers opposing a switch in their healthcare benefits from traditional Medicare to Aetna Medicare Advantage scored a landslide win over a slate associated with United Federation of Teachers (UFT) President Michael Mulgrew, who leads 200,000 educators and others who work in the public school system.

At stake in the election were 25 leadership positions and 300 seats reserved for retirees in the 3,400 member city union assembly, its legislative body. The insurgents, the NY Post reports, appear to have swept the contest by a 2-1 margin.

A New York judge ruled last year that the switch to Medicare Advantage violated city agreements with retirees, writing in July, “have shown that numerous promises were made by the City to then-New York City employees and future retirees that they would receive a Medicare supplemental plan when they retired, and that their first level of coverage once [they] retired would [be] Medicare.”

The healthcare contract for 250,000 retirees was a big catch for Hartford-based Aetna, owned by CVS. The process of awarding the deal was mired in several years of litigation between and among health insurers fighting to overturn city decisions and retirees arguing Medicare Advantage does not provide the benefits they were promised. City officials estimated the Medicare Advantage plan would save $600 million a year.

Published June 17, 2024.

June 17, 2024   Comments Off on NYC retirees upend union election over switch to Aetna Medicare Advantage dispute.

Middletown Democratic registrar refers primary petition signatures to SEEC in 33rd House District challenge.

Middletown Democratic registrar of voters Patricia Alston has referred primary petition signatures she deemed possible forgeries to the State Elections Enforcement Commission. The signatures appeared on petitions submitted by Reverend Robert Kyle Hoggard’s campaign. Hoggard is seeking to challenge incumbent Democrat Brandon Chafee.

Hoggard needs 298 valid signatures from registered Democrats residing in the 33rd House District. According to his Facebook page, Hoggard submitted more than 400. Local Democrats have been collecting affidavits and statements from purported signatories casting doubt on the petitions. Mike Fallon, head of Middletown’s Democratic town committee, released a statement Friday and described the petitions as including “multiple voters who stated that they did not sign a primary petition for the candidacy of Robert Kyle Hoggard and that the signature listed on the documents turned into the registrar’s office is fraudulent.”

Hoggard responded to an inquiry by Daily Ructions with his own statement:

Tactics like these dissuade people from wanting to run for office. There’s a political class that does everything in its power to try to dissuade voters from wanting to serve their communities and cancel this election. There’s nothing this political class can do to dissuade me from wanting to run where I was born and raised. I am committed to serving the great people of Middletown, and there’s nothing this political process can throw at me or do to change this. 

I am committed to repealing the car tax, lowering the cost of childcare, and changing our dysfunctional education system. 

The process of collecting signatures for a primary challenge is almost always more difficult than a campaign anticipates. Connecticut is the state with the laws most hostile to ballot access. It is not by happenstance that those laws endure. The establishment of each political party fears its primary voters more than it does the opposition party.

Hoggard is not expected to reach the 298 verified signatures for an August primary.

Published June 14, 2024.

June 14, 2024   Comments Off on Middletown Democratic registrar refers primary petition signatures to SEEC in 33rd House District challenge.

Special session will ignore school construction corruption fix.

As President Biden’s father might have said to him, “Joey, you can tell a lot about a man’s priorities by the bills he wants passed in a special session of the legislature.”

Governor Ned Lamont is shining a light on his own sense of urgency with what he does not want the legislature to consider in a special session later this month. The governor has no interest in fixing the appalling invitation to corruption in the school construction bill he signed into law this month. The legislation allows school construction managers to bid on contracts they are overseeing. Lamont says the legislature can get around to fixing the dangerous change in the law next year.

Next year may be months after former top Lamont adviser and school construction financing overlord Kostantinos Diamantis’s trial on corruption charges. Diamantis is accused in a federal indictment of extorting bribes from school construction contractors.

Instead of addressing corruption, Lamont and Department of Economic and Community Development Commissioner Dan O’Keefe want some changes in the state’s banking laws for Innovation Banks. Who would know more about money than two of the co-hosts of Biden’s high-dollar Greenwich fundraiser earlier this month?

Building public schools free of graft? That’s for other people–who send their children to those schools.

Published June 13, 2024.

June 13, 2024   Comments Off on Special session will ignore school construction corruption fix.

Governor Lamont appoints Massachusetts resident to lead Board of Regents.

Speaker of the House Matthew Ritter complained in May that he and other leaders struggle to find the best people to serve on state boards and commissions. Ritter’s bemoaning the quality of hundreds of volunteers was a stinging admission of failure by the Hartford Democrat.

Governor Ned Lamont signaled his agreement with Ritter on Wednesday when he elevated Massachusetts resident Martin Guay to serve as chair of the Board of Regents of the Connecticut State Colleges and Universities (CSCU) system. Lamont nominated Guay to the BOR in March. Guay’s nomination referred to him as a resident of Bedford, Massachusetts.

Guay is an executive at Connecticut-based Black and Decker.

This is the first time a governor has felt no Connecticut resident was qualified to serve as the head of a higher education board of trustees or regents. Chancellor Terrence Cheng is said to spend much of his time at his New York home.

Guay’s first task will be to explain why Cheng did not inform regents and others in a timely way of the “Notice of Concern” issued to Western Connecticut State University in March by the New England Commission on Higher Education (NECHE). The ominous letter appears not to have roused the regents, dominated by a supine majority, out of their torpor.

Published June 13, 2024.

June 12, 2024   Comments Off on Governor Lamont appoints Massachusetts resident to lead Board of Regents.