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One more update: The revolution has been cancelled. Update: It’s back on. Late summer coup fails in South Windsor. Republican council members learn a mayor must be removed before being replaced.

It ends with a whimper. The five aggrieved South Windsor Republicans chronicled below have announced their retreat by cancelling Thursday’s meeting to remove and replace Mayor Audrey Delnicki. The way forward is not clear. Whatever it is, it will be marked by tensions.

Update published September 18, 2024.

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UPDATE ON BELOW: The five Republicans on the South Windsor Town Council seeking to remove Mayor Audrey Delnicki have revised their agenda and are going forward. The meeting is set for Wednesday, September 19th [sic].

The revised agenda sets forth the causes prompting to make their move to remove Delnicki as mayor, not as a member of the Council. They accuse Delnicki of lack of leadership, withholding information, and lack of transparency. The agenda lists a “vote of no confidence from at least 5 of her fellow counselors.“

The removal of Delnicki, if successful, will be followed by the election of Siracusa as mayor. He is deputy mayor. Carolyn Carey will be elected to take his place.

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Public participation,according to the proposed agenda, is limited to 30 minutes, which seems inadequate for the gravity of the business on the agenda.

A call for a Special Meeting of the South Windsor Town Council on Wednesday at the unusual hour of 5 p.m. to elect a new Mayor and Deputy Mayor appears to have failed.

The meeting’s sole purpose, according to its agenda, was “appointing Matt Siracusa as Mayor and Carolyn Carey as Deputy Mayor. South Windsor has a mayor, Republican Audrey Delnicki. She was elected mayor by the members of the Town Council at its organization meeting the Monday after last November’s municipal election. South Windsor was a rare bright spot for Hartford area Republicans.

All six Republican council candidates were elected on a promise to reduce spending and cut taxes in the aftermath of a hefty revaluation tax increase. Local Democrats, seeking an unprecedented fourth two-year term, claimed only three of the council’s nine seats.

The Republicans in their first budget neither cut spending nor reduced taxes. Taxes increased. They discovered there are not enough motor vehicle released to slice a mill off the tax rate.

There has been some discord among the six Republicans, only two of whom previously served on the council. Five of the six have not been getting along with Delnicki, who has tried to impose some order on newcomers. They have resisted and planned to elect two of their own on Wednesday. The problem is there is not a vacancy in the position of mayor. The town’s charter and council rules make no direct provision for removing a mayor. You cannot have two mayors, a Tuesday memo from Town Attorney Richard D. Carella points out. The removal of any official appointed by the Council “must be accompanied by a statement of cause.”

Carella recommends withdrawing the call of Wednesday’s meeting. Sensible advice.

It has not taken long for the revolution to turn on its own. Delnicki stands in the way of the likely next target of the five Republicans, Town Manager Michael Maniscalco. Removing a town manager is a tricky and often expensive business, even if a council has engaged in the task of laying a predicate. That has not been done in South Windsor.

The five unhappy Republicans are unlikely to cease their quest for change. They will have to hurry. Suburban voters are often offended by public displays of intra-party tumult. If the conspirators survive next summer’s nominating caucus, they will face hard going in the November municipals.

Audrey Delnicki is married to State Representative Tom Delnicki. He is seeking his fifth term in the House this year and faces Democrat Steven King, a member of the council.

Published September 17, 2024.

September 17, 2024   3:40 pm   Comments Off on One more update: The revolution has been cancelled. Update: It’s back on. Late summer coup fails in South Windsor. Republican council members learn a mayor must be removed before being replaced.

Murphy blasts Prospect Holdings, took its PAC money in last campaign.

Senator Chris Murphy’s indignation often comes with a side dish. The Democrat seeking a third term sometimes inserts a general condemnation of capitalism when he fulminates. Sometimes he dresses up his tirade as contempt for neoliberalism.

Last week, Murphy used his spot on the Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions Committee to criticize Prospect Medical Holdings, owner of Manchester Memorial, Rockville, and Waterbury hospitals. The saga of Prospect operating those three for-profit hospitals has been fraught with difficulties. The proposed sale of them to Yale New Haven has been worse.

Murphy is furious over the large mortgages ($1.12 billion) the company took in 2018 and used a large chunk of the money ($457 million) for dividend and executive compensation.

In the 2018 campaign cycle, when Murphy was seeking his second term, the Prospect Medical Holdings PAC made contributions to four candidates, all senators, one Republican and three Democrats. One of the Democrats was Murphy. He accepted $2,500 from the Prospect Medical Holdings PAC on October 10, 2017, a year after it made its Connecticut acquisitions.

Prospect Medical’s business practices should have surprised no one. It is not capitalism that failed, it is the state’s healthcare regulators. Much of the company’s web of buying, borrowing, selling and leasing real estate can be found on public land records.

Rhode Island hospital regulators took steps to protect the state’s medical system from Prospect Medical engaging in asset stripping. Connecticut’s did not.

In 2017, before the deluge, all that mattered was the PAC contribution.

Published September 17, 2024.

September 17, 2024   2:43 pm   Comments Off on Murphy blasts Prospect Holdings, took its PAC money in last campaign.

Working Families Party asks candidates to pledge not to join moderate caucus.

The Working Families Party (WFP) candidate endorsement questionnaire provides a preview of the gathering storm in the House and Senate Democratic caucuses.

The long document poses this question:

While we have worked to build progressive power in our legislature, we are often challenged by the Moderate Caucus who have organized against us in our fights for increasing minimum wage, expanding healthcare to undocumented immigrants, expanding paid sick days, and establishing a fair work week. If [re]elected will you pledge to join the moderate caucus?

Yes, pledge not to join the moderate caucus

No

I am unsure–please explain

Here’s an explanation. Some suburban Democrats in competitive districts life to work both sides of the street. They like the votes the WFT endorsement provides but also find some advantage in telling constituents they are aligned with moderate Democrats–like Governor Ned Lamont.

WFP leaders have had enough of the shapeshifting. Diversity of thought is no virtue. The ideological battle among the Democrats, who enjoy overwhelming control of the House and the Senate, will become more open and pointed next year.

Published September 11, 2024.

September 11, 2024   10:42 am   Comments Off on Working Families Party asks candidates to pledge not to join moderate caucus.

Simmons wins Independent Party endorsement in first for 36th Senate District Democrats.

The Independent Party has endorsed a Democrat in the 36th Senate District for the first time. Democrat Nick Simmons defeated incumbent Republican Ryan Fazio for the party’s nomination in the district that includes Greenwich, New Canaan and part of Stamford.

The Independent Party endorsed Republican incumbent Scott Frantz in the party’s 2018 annus horribilus. Republicans lost five of their 18 seats, including the 36th for the first time since the Great Depression year of 1930. The Independent Party line delivered 643 votes for Frantz.

Democrat Alex Kasser (formerly Bergstein) was re-elected in 2020, defeating Republican Ryan Fazio. Kasser resigned the seat in June 2021, triggering a summer special election. Fazio defeated Democrat Alexis Gevanter by 458 votes. Petitioning candidate John Blankley, a Greenwich Democrat, received 408 votes.

In 2022, the 36th was home to the closest upper chamber contest. Fazio won a full term by defeating Democrat Trevor Crow by 89 votes out of 42,845 cast. The Independent Party made no endorsement. Fazio withstood a Democratic wave as Governor Ned Lamont won 4,369 votes more than Republican Bob Stefanowski. It was an all-Greenwich ticket at the top of the Democratic line with Lamont, Senator Richard Blumenthal and U.S. Representative Jim Himes. Democrats won the three Greenwich state House seats.

Control of the Independent Party has been seriously contested as a result of the decisive role it played in the 2010 gubernatorial election when Chester Republican Thomas Marsh won more than 17,000 votes as the party’s nominee. That was far more than Democrat Dan Malloy’s 6,000 vote margin over Greenwich Republican Tom Foley.

Fazio will be battling more headwinds this year. The Greenwich Republican organization has been in a constant state of ideological war, including bitter primaries earlier this year for seats on the local town committee. The Stamford Republican organization continues to decline as a local force.

In addition to completing a questionnaire, candidates seeking the Independent endorsement were required to sign the pledge below:

I, __________, strongly support free and fair elections and the rule of law, and reject the actions on January 6th, 2021 that attempted to prevent the peaceful transfer of power for the first time in the history of the United States. I accept the results of all elections past and future, as certified by
election officials.
Furthermore, by seeking the endorsement of the Independent Party, I will actively cosponsor and support legislation advancing the responses I have given to the questions asked by the Independent Party of Connecticut in selecting candidates for endorsement.

That pledge, a reflection of our perilous politics, ought not to have been difficult for any candidate. It may cause some aggrieved Republicans problems with their local activists.

In some districts, including the 36th, candidates seeking the Independent endorsement were required to gather and submit enough signatures to restore the minor party to the ballot line. The Simmons campaign provided more than the 430 necessary, according to Simmons.

Published September 4, 2024.

September 4, 2024   12:23 pm   Comments Off on Simmons wins Independent Party endorsement in first for 36th Senate District Democrats.

Former Old Saybrook police officer facing sexual assault charges arrested for DUI.

Retired Old Saybrook police officer Jay Rankin was arrested in Old Saybrook on Tuesday for allegedly driving under the influence, according to the local police department’s website. He is scheduled to appear in Superior Court in Middletown on September 9th.

Eight days later, Rankin will return to Superior Court in Danielson on sexual assault charges stemming from his February arrest. The former Old Saybrook fire department volunteer and chief was arrested last winter by the state Environmental Conservation Police on charges arising out of an alleged sexual assault at a boat launch in Thompson in 2023.

Rankin, according to the New Haven Register, “was charged with third-degree sexual assault, fourth-degree sexual assault, public indecency, second-degree breach of peace and prohibited activities in limited access areas.” His case is under seal, suggesting he has applied for admission to one of the state’s many pretrial diversion programs that would result in a dismissal of all charges after meeting conditions set by a judge.

Published August 29, 2024.

August 29, 2024   9:59 am   Comments Off on Former Old Saybrook police officer facing sexual assault charges arrested for DUI.

House Democrats go low in Southbury flooding, try to blame Republican for 1,000 year storm damage. Jahana Hayes remains in Chicago.

The state House Democratic Campaign Committee (HDCC) tried to exploit flooding from Sunday’s historic storm for political gain. Candace from the HDCC sent a text with a photograph of a flooded road, claiming “Southbury’s infrastructure needs an upgrade but our town’s current leadership seems to think ‘if it ain’t broke don’t fix it’ is good public policy.”

Republican Jason Buchsbaum is a member of the town’s Board of Selectman. He was on the ticket that inflicted a stinging defeat on Democrat Ed Edelson in 2015 as he sought a third term as first selectman. Buchsbaum and Edelson will face each other in the open 69th House District seat in the November.

Candace was not finished. She also complained that state government has spent millions on “our major cities, it’s time they did it for us too!” Candace may not realize that the House Democrats have enjoyed control of the House for 37 years. That’s plenty of time to have addressed the infrastructure needs of affluent communities like Southbury, though planning for a 1,000 year storm was never going to be high on anyone’s list of infrastructure projects.

With two people dead and the cost of the flooding still being assessed, House Democrats might want to take a break from campaigning in the disaster areas for a few days. Adding to Southbury’s slim inventory of affordable housing is likely to get more attention and funding.

Edelson’s four years leading the town probably included little planning for a 1,000 year storm.

Residents of Southbury and other towns may have wondered in their misery and fear where U.S. Representative Jahana Hayes has been since Sunday. She stepped up in front of the cameras on Tuesday night and showed them. She was in Chicago at the Democratic National Convention. Hayes, seeking a fourth term in November, cast the Connecticut delegation’s votes, 73 for Kamala Harris and 1 present. An exuberant Hayes announced the votes “for the first female president of the United States of America, Kamala Harris.”

As July began, Hayes took a distinctly negative view of a Harris campaign for president. She did not agree with those of us who were certain the vice president would meet the moment. “Rep. Jahana Hayes (D-Conn.) stood up before her colleagues during an all-caucus meeting to argue that putting the vice president atop the ticket” the Washington Post reported, “at this point in the election cycle would be setting Harris up for failure, according to two people familiar with the discussion.”

Hayes did issue a weather advisory Sunday as she headed for Chicago.

Published August 21, 2024.

August 21, 2024   11:16 am   Comments Off on House Democrats go low in Southbury flooding, try to blame Republican for 1,000 year storm damage. Jahana Hayes remains in Chicago.

Tony Hwang goes small. Fairfield Republican rejects Sierra Club endorsement to thwart challenger. Stumbles over role in electricity rate rise.

State Senator Tony Hwang is feeling the heat. The Fairfield Republican won re-election to the 28th Senate District two years ago by 636 votes, the closest of his five campaigns for the seat. In 2022, Hwang faced Democrat Timothy Gavin, a newcomer to politics.

This year is different. Hwang faces Rob Blanchard, a member of Fairfield’s Representative Town Meeting and veteran of several statewide campaigns. Hwang’s frayed nerves are showing, and they are not attractive. And it’s only August.

The four towns that comprise the district, Bethel, Easton, Fairfield and Newtown, are communities crammed with voters of all party registrations or none who have long cared about the environment. Whether it’s protecting Long Island Sound, improving the quality of air and water, preserving wetlands and open space, or addressing climate change, the voters in 28th Senate District pay attention to the state of their world, near and far.

It came as a surprise that Tony Hwang declined the endorsement of the Sierra Club, which describes itself as “the nation’s largest and most effective grassroots environmental movement.” The Sierra Club is proud of its 130-year history of preserving land and protecting the environment. Its endorsement adds a credential that crosses party lines. Tony Hwang rejected it in a petty act dressed up as campaign strategy that he probably hoped would remain known to only a few insiders.

The Sierra Club’s political arm has rules about endorsements. If two candidates merit the organization’s endorsement, it will ask both candidates to agree to a dual endorsement. If one refuses, no endorsement is made. Tony Hwang vetoed the clubs desire to endorse him and Blanchard. If only he could not have it, Hwang wants no one to get it, regardless of each candidate’s merits. Hwang would rather the voters know less about the candidates’ stands on the environment than that he share the endorsement with Blanchard.

Let me declare an interest. I met Rob Blanchard seven or eight years ago when he was working on a campaign. We are friends. That disclosure may not help him among some politicos but Daily Ructions readers enjoy learning about politics as practiced behind the curtain. This is a campaign story of extreme pettiness that should be told, no matter who the candidates are.

Having been a candidate for the state House and Senate long ago (4-2), I am still surprised when an experienced politician is not smart enough to, as an admiring mobster once advised comedian Joan Rivers, “run your own race. Don’t look left, don’t look right. Stay in your lane.”

The results of the 2022 race in the 28th Senate District suggest more voters than ever are on to Tony Hwang and he is uncertain of how to stop the erosion of support.

Instead of trying to block a Sierra Club joint endorsement, Hwang ought to be explaining why he voted for the catastrophic Millstone legislation that last month caused families in the district he serves to have to cope with a skyrocketing electric bill. The ill-judged 2017 bill that passed with Hwang’s support will continue to burden ratepayers for another five years.

Campaigns can provide unexpected revelations about a candidate, even one who has been around as long as Hwang. Voters will want to ask themselves what sort of candidate rejects the endorsement of the Sierra Club but accepts a maximum campaign contribution from a man whose fabricated evidence and false testimony helped send two innocent young men to prison for 25 years in 1985. Dr. Henry Lee’s testimony in the trial of Ralph “Ricky” Birch and Shawn Henning eventually cost the state $25 million in damages to the two wrongly convicted men three years after their convictions were overturned in 2020.

Lee ran the state police’s forensic lab when he testified there were blood stains on a towel found at the New Milford murder scene of victim Everett Carr. Last year, “U.S. District Court Judge Victor Bolden ruled in July that there was no evidence Lee ever conducted any blood tests on the towel…,” Connecticut Public Radio and the AP reported. Lee’s testimony, courts ruled, was crucial in convicting Birch and Henning. That $25 million came from taxpayers to begin to compensate the wrongly convicted defendants for the 35 years they spent in prison. Convicting the innocent is the nightmare of ever free and just society.

Hwang may think he has slain a mighty dragon by killing the Sierra Club’s endorsement, but it’s his self-inflicted wounds that tells the story in the 28th Senate District.

Published August 19, 2024.

August 19, 2024   9:02 am   Comments Off on Tony Hwang goes small. Fairfield Republican rejects Sierra Club endorsement to thwart challenger. Stumbles over role in electricity rate rise.

Democratic State Representative: “We cannot permit a person who is of Jewish origin, of Jewish origin to represent our community.”

The executive board of the Stamford Democratic City Committee began primary day by calling on state Representative Anabel Figueroa (D-Stamford) to resign as a member of the city’s Board of Representatives and the city party committee. The board issued the public declaration after it discovered antisemitic slurs Figueroa made in her primary campaign against Democrat Jonathan Jacobson, the party-endorsed candidate in today’s primary.

Jacobson is Jewish.

In a video posted on Youtube on July 28th, Figueroa, speaking in Spanish, concluded her interview on July 28th by announcing, “The Hispanic vote is going to determine on August 13th who will win to represent or who will continue to represent you. We cannot permit a person who is of Jewish origin, of Jewish origin, to represent our community. It’s impossible.”

Figueroa won election to the state House of Representatives in a February 2023 special election. Her hateful targeting of a Jew has roiled Stamford Democrats, who think of themselves as modern, progressive stewards of Connecticut’s fastest growing city on Long Island Sound, 40 miles from New York City.

UPDATE: Reached while campaigning this afternoon, Jonathan Jacobson said this is not his first encounter with Figueroa and hate. In 2018, Jacobson, a member of the Board of Representatives, moved to censure a fellow member who had posted anti-Muslim and anti-immigrant sentiments in social media. Figueroa refused to join colleagues condemning hate.

Jacobson, who was called an “Israeli attorney” by a Figueroa supporter, said the Democrat is using antisemitism to “influence the outcome of an election.

On Tuesday afternoon, Figueroa raised the “I have Jewish friends” defense to explain her poisonous comments. She apologized and said, “we need leaders who represent our districts.” There are not enough Latino legislators, she believes. She seemed to attribute her comments to being “a bilingual speaker.” That appears to make her fluent in hatred in two languages.

“We cannot permit a person who is of Jewish origin, of Jewish origin, to represent our community” sounds as disqualifying in Spanish as it does in English.

Published August 13, 2024.

August 13, 2024   12:24 pm   Comments Off on Democratic State Representative: “We cannot permit a person who is of Jewish origin, of Jewish origin to represent our community.”

August Augury: Bridgeport Democrats lagging behind Trumbull Democrats in early voting.

Trumbull Democrats took advantage of the first two days of early voting in the primary for the 22nd Senate District nomination. One candidate in the quartet of hopefuls is from Trumbull, Sujata Gadkar-Wilcox. Her two unsuccessful but spirited campaigns for the House of Representatives have made her a local favorite. The other three, Scott Burns, Bill Finch, and Tyler Mack, are Bridgeport Democrats.

In the first two days of early voting this week, 104 Bridgeport Democrats cast votes. In Trumbull, 124 Democrats voted. The Bridgeport figure includes votes cast in both Senate primaries in the state’s most populous city.

Trumbull’s Democratic organization has gained a reputation as one of the state’s most effective and has lately fought above its weight. It is the home of the party’s state chairwoman, Nancy DiNardo.

Other towns of note include Hamden, where Democrats have two House primaries. As of 8 p.m. Tuesday, 482 Democrats had voted. In the 2nd Senate District, incumbent Democrat Doug McCrory faces two challengers, Shellye Davis and Ayanna Taylor. In Windsor, 119 Democrats had voted, while 145 Bloomfield Democrats cast a ballot. Bloomfield is also the center of a ferocious primary for the House in a district that includes a portion of West Hartford. In Hartford, 30 Democrats had cast early votes in the Senate primary.

The only statewide primary is the Republican one for the party’s U.S. Senate nomination. On Monday and Tuesday, 1861 Republicans had cast an early ballot under. Of those, 20 were from party-endorsed candidate Gerry Smith’s hometown of Beacon Falls, 12 were cast in Manchester, where challenger Matt Corey lives.

Early voting continues through Sunday at a designated location (usually the town hall) in each of the state’s 169 municipalities.

Published August 8, 2024.

August 8, 2024   9:40 am   Comments Off on August Augury: Bridgeport Democrats lagging behind Trumbull Democrats in early voting.

Aetna’s Brian Kane gone as president after less than a year. Medicare costs continue to roil insurers.

CVS hosted an eventful quarterly earnings call Wednesday morning. It announced that Brian Kane, president of CVS-owned Aetna, has left after less than a year heading the health insurance giant.

Aetna has been grappling with significant declines in it critical satisfaction ratings with its Medicare Advantage plans in 2023. Medicare recipients enrolled in Medicare Advantage plans have been seeking and receiving more medical services than expected as costs increase, squeezing profits. for insurers.

Aetna managers have been warning employees to expect layoffs.

Published August 7, 2024.

August 7, 2024   9:49 am   Comments Off on Aetna’s Brian Kane gone as president after less than a year. Medicare costs continue to roil insurers.