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Slow Recovery: Connecticut Gained 25,800 Jobs in May.

Connecticut added 25,800 jobs in May after losing more 269,000 jobs in April, according to the Department of Labor. The number portends a slow economic recovery for Connecticut, which was in a more than decade-long struggle to restore economic growth after the 2008-2009 recession.

Creating the conditions for jobs and opportunity to thrive in Connecticut has been the state’s policymaker’s challenge for more than 30 years. The global pandemic has added another high hurdle.

June 23, 2020   9:26 am   Comments Off on Slow Recovery: Connecticut Gained 25,800 Jobs in May.

Crazy is in Session. Republican Gilmer Tweeted QAnon Conspiracy Madness #StormIsUponUs.

Second Congressional District Republicans nominated a candidate who has embraced QAnon conspiracy paranoia. Thomas Gilmer has used his Twitter account to promote The Storm–the QAnon fantasy about arresting and incarcerating members of their favorite favorite target, the Deep State.

Crazytown, as New York magazine calls Qanon, is home to a busy conspiracy theory factory. Gilmer responded to a tweet from Donald Trump disciple Candace Owens about the coronavirus, offering the thought that the global pandemic and reaction to it “is a deep state attempt to destroy america [sic] and our economy.” The tweet was accompanied by hashtags for StormIsUponUs, QAnon, MAGA and KAG.

They are the permanently aggrieved. In May, Gilmer tweeted the trope that Barack Obama was not born in the United States. Even Donald Trump has abandoned that.

Gilmer was included in a Media Matters story revealing 54 Republican candidates who support QAnon. Media Matters was founded by David Brock, who first came to public attention with unflattering investigations of Anita Hill and Hillary Clinton.

Gilmer faces seven term Democratic incumbent U.S. Representative Joe Courtney in November. Gilmer’s nomination is more disturbing than the usual ones that the state’s Republican party is in an advance state of disintegration.

June 22, 2020   2:10 pm   Comments Off on Crazy is in Session. Republican Gilmer Tweeted QAnon Conspiracy Madness #StormIsUponUs.

Confronting the Demagogue: Celebrate the 70th Anniversary of Margaret Chase Smith’s Declaration of Conscience.

Seventy years ago this month, Senator Margaret Chase Smith (R-Maine) broke the reign of silence and condemned the demagogue Joseph McCarthy on the floor of the United State Senate.

Four years later, Edward R. Murrow delivered a memorable summary of McCarthy’s wickedness. “Accusation is not proof….we will not walk in fear, one of another, we will not be driven into an age of unreason….”

June 12, 2020   9:04 pm   Comments Off on Confronting the Demagogue: Celebrate the 70th Anniversary of Margaret Chase Smith’s Declaration of Conscience.

Legislature to Consider Police Reforms.

The Hartford Courant provides a list of police reform proposals included in a report from a legislative task force on police accountability and transparency. There are 20 recommendations. The recommendation that seeks to eliminate “stops for low-level administrative and equipment offenses and consent searches of motor vehicles” is more consequential than it may sound.

Police often make stops when they see a light on a motor vehicle not functioning. From there, an officer, or more than one after a few minutes, may search the vehicle–sometimes claiming probable cause with the flimsiest excuse–and what started as a broken light stop escalates. The driver or a passenger may engage in a verbal exchange with the police officer and suddenly a malfunctioning signal light stop turns into a charge of interfering with a police officer.

The task force also recommends ensuring “each officer commits to 500 hours of community engagement activities within Connecticut’s major urban centers as prior to receiving initial officer certification.” A sign at a recent protest made a telling point. Some states-Connecticut is one of them-require more hours of training for a barber or hairdressing license than they do to become a police officer. In Connecticut, it’s 1,500 hours for hairdressing and barber licenses.

The Connecticut Police Academy trains about 90% of the state’s police recruits. Its program “is approximately 22 weeks long. Recruit officers reside at the Academy from 8 a.m. on Monday to 6 p.m. Friday each week. Recruits must successfully pass, with a grade of 70% or better, each of 17 different academic areas as well as successfully pass each of a series of different practical skill areas (currently 12). Additionally, recruits must complete a field and departmental training program consisting of a minimum of 400 additional hours.” That’s 1,280 hours, 220 fewer than needed to obtain a haircutting license. Another 500 hours for police officers seems like a sensible, overdue improvement.

The National Organization of Black Police Executives (NOBLE) participated in a 2017 report, National Consensus Policy and Discussion on the Use of Force. You can read it here. The first general provision: Use of physical force should be discontinued when resistance ceases or the incident is under control.

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June 12, 2020   9:51 am   Comments Off on Legislature to Consider Police Reforms.

Pence and Campaign Staff Without Masks.

He’s the head of the White House Coronavirus task force. Vice President Mike Pence should be wearing a mask–and so should the crowd of campaign workers he’s addressing.

Does Mother not remind him as the day begins to wear his mask and keep it on?

Pence deleted the above tweet.

June 11, 2020   12:57 pm   Comments Off on Pence and Campaign Staff Without Masks.

Chris DiPentima to Lead CBIA. Board Votes Thursday.

Middletown businessman Chris DiPentima has been chosen to serve as the next President and CEO of the Connecticut Business & Industry Association, Daily Ructions has learned. DiPentima was the head of his family business Pegasus Manufacturing, which is located in Middletown, until it was sold.

CBIA’s board will confirm the executive committee’s recommendation on Thursday. DiPentima will begin his duties on August 1st at as the state’s largest business advocacy group grapples with a recession marked by the loss of hundreds of thousands of jobs this year. The association’s health insurance business has also been buffeted by these challenging times.

DiPentima is on CBIA’s board of directors and a past board chair. He is also on the executive committee, which recommended him for the job.

June 9, 2020   4:01 pm   Comments Off on Chris DiPentima to Lead CBIA. Board Votes Thursday.

Federal Court Upholds State’s Primary Ballot Access Law, Injunction Denied.

Federal District Court Judge Janet C. Hall upheld Connecticut’s primary petition access law, denying an injunction sought by three Democratic hopefuls and a Democratic voter. The Plaintiffs complained the requirement to obtain signatures of registered Democrats on primary petitions during the COVID-19 pandemic makes it impossible to qualify for a primary. The Plaintiffs sought to have the number of signatures reduced from 5% to 1% of registered party voters in a district.

Governor Ned Lamont used executive orders to extend the signature collection period from 14 days to 16 days. He also reduced the number of signatures required from 5% to 3.5% of registered party members in a district. In addition, Lamont eliminated in person signatures and allowed signatures by mail or electronic means, with no requirement of a witness to the signatures.

Plaintiffs argued that the reduced requirements put an unconstitutional burden on their ability to gain access to the ballot or the right to participate in a primary.

The Plaintiffs in the motion for the injunction are voter Lorna Chand and aspiring candidates Andy Gottlieb, Jason Bartlett, and Richard Lacourciere. The court found “Plaintiffs have not provided sufficient evidence to demonstrate that their inability to to obtain the required signatures reflects the near impossibility of meeting the statutory requirements and is not the result of, for example, an insufficient or ineffective effort.”

The plaintiffs have until June 16th to submit petitions to qualify for a primary challenge to the endorsed candidate in their contest.

June 8, 2020   1:20 pm   Comments Off on Federal Court Upholds State’s Primary Ballot Access Law, Injunction Denied.

On This Day in 1968: Robert Kennedy Won the California Primary.

Fifty-two years ago today Robert Kennedy won the winner-take-all California primary, scoring a four point victory over Eugene McCarthy. Moments after delivering his midnight victory address in the ballroom of the Ambassador Hotel, RFK left through the kitchen, paused to greet hotel workers, and was shot by Sirhan Sirhan. He died the next day.

Above is his 1966 “Ripple of Hope” speech, delivered before the anti-apartheid National Union of South African Students on June 6th. If you are assisting with distance learning, consider sharing this speech with your homebound students. Here’s a teaching guide to accompany it.

The speech is a memorable example of individual change. In 1966, RFK was serving in the United States Senate from New York. Three years earlier as attorney general in his brother’s administration, Robert Kennedy had authorized the FBI to engage in wiretap surveillance of Martin Luther King, Jr.

June 4, 2020   8:57 am   Comments Off on On This Day in 1968: Robert Kennedy Won the California Primary.

CT Mirror Op-ed: Egyptian Dictator’s Lobbyist Defends Secrecy in Collapsed Dalio and State Partnership.

Toby Moffett. Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak’s lobbyist is not happy that ordinary standards of transparency caused Dalio Philanthropies to withdraw from a publicly and privately financed initiative. Moffett wrote an opinion piece that appears in CTMirror.org blaming Republicans for wrecking the projected $300 million project by seeking standard accountability in the spending of public funds. Moffett makes no mention of what appears to be the shabby treatment of the education organization’s accomplished executive director.

Those with long memories may recall Democrat Moffett was elected to Congress from Connecticut’s Sixth Congressional district in 1974. Moffett was part of the post-Watergate reforming class. That was the Congress that championed, among other issues, open government legislation.

Moffett declined to challenge fellow congressman Christopher Dodd for the Democratic U.S. Senate nomination for the seat of retiring incumbent Abraham Ribicoff in 1980. Instead, Moffett took on Republican incumbent U.S. Senator Lowell P. Weicker, Jr. of Greenwich, in 1982. Weicker defeated Moffett by nearly 50,000 votes, with the Democrat running far behind other statewide Democratic candidates.

Moffett’s agony in defeat became a long running story in Connecticut’s sympathetic media. In 1986, Moffett challenged often underestimated incumbent William O’Neill for the Democratic nomination for governor. Moffett failed to garner enough state convention delegate votes to qualify for a primary. Four years later, Moffett suffered a crushing defeat when he attempted another resurrection, this time in the open Fifth Congressional District seat. Waterbury Republican Gary Franks beat Moffett and became the first African-American Republican to win a seat in the House in nearly 60 years.

Between comeback bids, the Nora Desmond of Connecticut politics did a stint as a local television news anchor and reporter. He went on to lobby for chemical manufacturing giant Monsanto.

From 2007 until 2012, Moffett lobbied on behalf of Egyptian dictator Hosni Mubarak. Moffett formed a lobbying company with Democrat John Podesta and right wing former Republican U.S. Representative Robert Livingston to represent the Egyptian tyrant. The Arab Spring in 2011 brought the overthrow of Mubarak, who with his family looted as much as $70 billion from the Egyptian people. Amnesty International condemned Mubarak’s government for its legacy of “mass torture and arbitrary detention.”

A 2012 New York Times story reported the the end of the lucrative lobbying deal:

Lobbyists for the Egyptian government in Washington have ended their contracts with the country because of growing tensions after a raid by Egyptian authorities on several American nonprofit organizations.

The Egyptian government has refused to let employees of the organizations leave the country. The detained workers include Sam LaHood, son of Ray LaHood, who is the Obama administration’s secretary of transportation.

The lobbying firms include the Livingston Group, run by former Representative Robert L. Livingston, Republican of Louisiana; the Moffett Group, run by former Representative Toby Moffett, Democrat of Connecticut; and the Podesta Group, owned by Tony Podesta, one of the most powerful lobbyists in Washington. Mr. Podesta has close ties to the Obama administration. 

The firms were widely criticized for distributing talking points defending the Egyptian government’s raid. They shared a lobbying contract worth more $1.1 million a year to represent Egypt’s interests in Washington, according to documents filed with the Department of Justice.

Defending the raid of American nonprofit groups that monitored elections and government transparency in Egypt. That’s the Toby Moffett mocking calls for transparency in spending $100 million in taxpayer funds and ignoring the account of a woman who was hired to run the project and mysteriously suspended. This isn’t Mubarak’s Cairo. It’s Connecticut. His talking points will do him no good. We do things differently here.

June 3, 2020   4:26 pm   Comments Off on CT Mirror Op-ed: Egyptian Dictator’s Lobbyist Defends Secrecy in Collapsed Dalio and State Partnership.

Flexer to Courant, Keating: You Are Racists and Part of the Problem

State Senator Mae Flexer (D-Killingly) accused the Hartford Courant and veteran political reporter Chris Keating of racism for not including state Senator Gary Winfield (D-New Haven) in an article about requiring the wider use of police body cameras. Flexer wrote on her Twitter account that the Courant and Keating “completely erased the incredible work of black legislators like @10SDDem Gary Winfield.”

“You are part of the problem,” Flexer tweeted at the newspaper and Keating, adopting a favorite line of loathsome demagogue Donald Trump in blaming the press for the nation’s ills. Trump has repeatedly called the media “enemies of the people.”

Keating, contacted by Daily Ructions, says that Winfield was the first legislator he called Tuesday morning for a comment on the story and left a message for the New Haven Democrat. Winfield did not return Keating’s call.

In Connecticut, when reporters talk to the four Democratic leaders who set the legislative agenda, they speak to white Democrats because there are no minority members in the top positions in the House and Senate. Flexer would know that because as a member of the House and now the Senate, she has cast her vote for those positions for fellow white Democrats. The Senate Democrats, where Flexer serves as co-chair of the government administration committee, have chosen only white Democrats as their top two leaders for decades.

Winfield, who is African-American, is the co-chair of the legislature’s judiciary committee and is thought to have a chance to oust Senate Majority Leader Bob Duff for the Senate’s number two spot after November’s election.

Flexer has expressed interest in the top Senate jobs, but has been concerned she would have to stop soliciting lobbyists for donations to underwrite her salary with a political organization.

June 3, 2020   9:11 am   Comments Off on Flexer to Courant, Keating: You Are Racists and Part of the Problem