Connecticut Post

National election fraud debate colors Conn. ballot effort

- By Ken Dixon kdixon@ctpost.com Twitter: @KenDixonCT

Conservati­ve Republican lawmakers on Wednesday made their presence known on the Government Administra­tion and Elections Committee, opposing a plan to keep using COVID-era, no-excuse-absentee-ballots for upcoming special and municipal elections.

The committee’s Democratic majority crushed Republican opposition, setting the proposal on track for a public hearing. The debate set the tone for a possibly contentiou­s session over election reforms at a time when GOP allegation­s of fraud in the presidenti­al election were rejected as unfounded in courts throughout the nation.

During the September special session of the General Assembly, lawmakers approved a law to allow all state voters to vote through mail-in ballots — contributi­ng to the 80 percent turnout in November. The Constituti­on limits absentee ballots to those serving in the military, suffering from illness, or out-of-state on Election Day.

Sen. Rob Sampson of Wolcott, ranking Republican on the committee, said state voters need assurances.

“It will be my focus to restore the public’s confidence in our election cycle,” he said. “Our system is breaking down, and each one of us knows this. There are people on the right that believe that Donald Trump is an absolutely perfect human being and he can do no wrong and the election was stolen from him. And then there are people who are on the left who believe that Trump is pure evil and any mention of an election-fraud issue or problem is completely contrived and made up.”

Sampson said the truth is in the middle.

“I supported President Trump, but not 100 percent of the time,” Sampson said. “He’s a human being, just like the rest of us. I would like to make it quite clear that election fraud is a legitimate and real thing, and it does happen. Was the election stolen from Donald Trump? I doubt it, but that’s not enough to dismiss every issue or accusation or potential case of voter fraud and we must remember that. There is half of the country out there and a good portion of our state that believes that the election was stolen, whether it was right or wrong.”

Sen. Mae Flexer, DWillimant­ic, said the proposal to continue the mailin balloting was being accelerate­d because of the pending special session in February for a Stamford Senate seat, as well as upcoming May elections in some towns and cities, to allow residents to avoid polling places in the pandemic.

“There is a lot of concern that voters got used to the protocols that were followed for November of last year,” Flexer said. “There was some urgency to raising this concept and potentiall­y getting it going in the committee process. This conversati­on is going to happen one way or another in the next couple of weeks, whether that’s here in this committee or through an emergency certificat­ion process.”

After the meeting, Cheri Quickmire, executive director of Common Cause in Connecticu­t, the election watchdog group, disagreed with Sampson’s premise.

“To my knowledge there was no verified election fraud in the state,” Quickmire said in an interview. “None. We had a very successful election system with a high turnout rate.”

Gabe Rosenberg, general counsel for Secretary of the State Denise Merrill, said Sampson seems to be subscribin­g to refuted fraud theories.

“Refusing to confront and repudiate the conspiracy theories that the election was ‘stolen’ from Donald Trump is a direct attack on the thousands of hard-working local election officials and poll workers across the state of Connecticu­t, from both parties who came together to ensure every Connecticu­t citizen has a voice in our democracy,” Rosenberg said. “Allowing these conspiracy theories to flourish, despite the lack of supporting evidence, has helped to create the political environmen­t of fear and mistrust that led to last week’s violent insurrecti­on in our nation’s capital.”

There are pending proposals to change the state Constituti­on to allow a range of election reforms to make it easier for voters, but they will require statewide votes in 2022 or 2024, and will come before the committee later in the session, which ends June 9. An executive order from Gov. Ned Lamont allowed no-excuse mail-in balloting in the party primaries last summer.

 ??  ?? State Sen. Mae Flexer, D-Willimanti­c, co-chairman of the Government Administra­tion & Elections Committee.
State Sen. Mae Flexer, D-Willimanti­c, co-chairman of the Government Administra­tion & Elections Committee.
 ??  ?? Cheri Quickmire, executive director of Common Cause in Connecticu­t
Cheri Quickmire, executive director of Common Cause in Connecticu­t
 ??  ?? State Sen. Rob Sampson, R-Wolcott, in a 2018 file photo.
State Sen. Rob Sampson, R-Wolcott, in a 2018 file photo.

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