Connecticut Post

Julie Belaga, first woman nominated for governor by CT GOP, dies at 91

- By Mark Pazniokas

Julie D. Belaga, a political moderate whose victory in a three-way primary in 1986 made her the first woman nominated for governor by the Connecticu­t Republican Party, died Friday night at her home at an assisted living facility in Westport. She was 91.

Her death was confirmed by her son, David D. Belaga.

“She was a terrific lady and a real asset to politics in Connecticu­t,” said former Gov. Lowell P. Weicker Jr., one of the political contempora­ries who encouraged her to run 35 years ago.

Belaga was elected to the General Assembly in 1976, representi­ng Westport in the 136th House District. She was 46, one of a generation of women who came to Hartford in the 1970s, when the GOP elected more women than did the Democratic Party.

The decade began with fewer than 20 women in what was then a 177-seat House of Representa­tives. In 1976, Belaga was one of 31 women, 18 of them Republican­s, elected to a House downsized to its present 151 seats.

She was in the minority for all but her last term, but she contribute­d to the crafting and passage of coastal management and wastedispo­sal bills. Buoyed by the landslide victory of Ronald Reagan, the GOP won an 86-66 majority in 1984, its first since 1972.

Her run for governor came 12 years after Democrat Ella T. Grasso became the first woman elected governor in the state in 1974 and 20 years before M. Jodi Rell became the first Republican woman to win a gubernator­ial election in 2006.

With the GOP in control, Belaga made a bid to become speaker of the House, losing to R.E. Van Norstrand of Darien, said Rell, who was a recently elected freshman during the contest. Belaga would have been the first woman elected speaker. She settled for deputy majority leader.

She downplayed gender as an issue in the 1986 gubernator­ial race.

“The fact that I happen to be a woman is really kind of old news in our state, where Ella Grasso was a governor that was very successful,’’ Belaga told reporters after her primary win. “I don’t think that my gender is as much of a phenomenon here as it might be in other states. On the other hand, it certainly is not a liability.”

At the time, Weicker was a U.S. Senator with a tenuous place in a Republican Party that was shifting to the right under Reagan. The GOP’s state chair was his close ally and friend, Thomas J. D’Amore Jr.

John McKinney, the former state Senate GOP leader, said his late father, Congressma­n Stewart B. McKinney, and Weicker encouraged Belaga to run for governor, thinking she could be competitiv­e in a primary as a candidate from Fairfield Country.

“The numbers were very good for Fairfield County back in the day, for Republican­s,” McKinney said. “So we thought she had a shot.”

D’Amore invited Belaga to a meeting about the party’s best approach to challengin­g Gov. William A. O’Neill, a Democrat, and capitalizi­ng on the successes of 1984.

“I was in my ninth year in the legislatur­e, and he called a group of people to his office and he said, ‘Who wants to run?’ And nobody raised their hand but me. It was all men but me,” Belaga recalled in an interview after D’Amore’s death in 2014.

Actually, two men were very much interested: Richard C. Bozzuto and Gerald Labriola, who had sought the nomination in 1982, when the GOP unified behind Lewis B. Rome, eschewing a primary.

Bozzuto was endorsed at the state convention in 1986, where Belaga placed her own name in nomination, a ploy that allowed her to deliver a nominating speech. Stewart McKinney seconded the nomination.

“She gave a great speech,” John McKinney said.

Belaga had energetica­lly positioned herself as best ready to take on the Democrats, saying, “I can’t wait.” It was an applause line that became her campaign slogan.

Rell said Belaga sought her support, but she was committed to Bozzuto.

Primaries were rare in the 1980s, particular­ly among Republican­s who tended to abide by the judgment of convention delegates. Also, the threshold for qualifying was earning 20 percent of the convention vote, not the present 15 percent. But D’Amore urged a primary and told convention delegates it would be good for the party — especially after O’Neill succeeded in denying Toby Moffett the necessary delegate support for a Democratic challenge.

“We are not afraid to go to the people and have them join us in making our choices,” D’Amore said. “What were the Democrats afraid of ?’”

Belaga won the primary with 41 percent of the vote on Sept. 9. An early poll showed a competitiv­e race, with 35 percent for O’Neill, 30 percent for Belaga and 35 percent undecided. But when pushed, respondent­s gave O’Neill a 10-point lead that foreshadow­ed the ultimate result.

McKinney said Belaga came out of the late-season primary with a bump in the polls but little money for the general election. “She never got a chance really to get in the race, because she just didn’t have the finances,” he said. Connecticu­t has since moved its primaries to August.

O’Neill won easily, 575,638 to 408,489, and Democrats won back the General Assembly with majorities of 25-11 in the Senate and 92-59 in the House.

“You fought the fight well,” O’Neill said he told Belaga.

Belaga offered a wry, if rueful, election-night appraisal: “I guess Connecticu­t can wait.”

Weicker, who lost his Senate seat in 1988, would win the open seat for governor after O’Neill declined to seek reelection in 1990. Weicker’s comeback came after leaving the GOP and running as an independen­t. Rell, who was elected lieutenant governor as John G. Rowland’s running mate in 1994, became governor in 2004 after Rowland’s resignatio­n. Rell won a full term at the polls in 2006, the GOP’s last statewide win in Connecticu­t.

One of her congratula­tory messages came from Belaga, the Republican woman who had tried to get there first.

“I thought that was pretty nice,” Rell said.

Belaga was from Brookline, Mass., and never shook her Boston accent. She was a graduate of Syracuse University who taught school in Massachuse­tts for a time before marriage to an oil company executive, Myron “Mike” Belaga.

His postings took the couple overseas and to several states. They settled in Westport in 1965 after stops in Ohio, New Jersey and England. Mike Belaga, a former Republican town chair in Westport, died in November 2018.

Her survivors include her son, David Belaga and his wife, Alison, of East Northport, N.Y.; two daughters, Debra Belaga, and her husband, Steve Stublarec of Tiburon, Calif., and Heather McLean, and her husband, Rob, of Owings Mill, Md.; and three granddaugh­ters, Kristen Stublarec, Tracy Spencer and Lindsey Belaga.

Last year, Belaga sold her home and moved into an assisted living facility, The Residence at Westport.

After the 1986 campaign, Belaga spent a semester as a fellow in the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard, where she pondered a second act in public life. Belaga was named as the New England regional director of the Environmen­tal Protection Agency 1989 by George H.W. Bush and then to the board of Export-Import Bank of the U.S. by Bill Clinton.

She remained active in environmen­tal causes and encouraged women to get involved in politics. In 1994, she helped launch The Women’s Campaign School at Yale.

William J. Cibes, a Democratic state lawmaker who worked on the O’Neill campaign against Belaga, said she was an effective lawmaker who worked easily with Democrats, himself included.

“She was always someone who listened to reason. She didn’t always agree with me, and I didn’t always agree with her. But she was rational and analytical and was willing to let the facts go where they would lead,” Cibes said. “I really admired her as a legislator.”

In retirement, Belaga and Cibes worked together as members of the board of the nonprofit Connecticu­t News Project, which launched the CT Mirror in January 2010.

Funeral plans were incomplete. Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the family might postpone a celebratio­n of her life until the spring. In lieu of flowers, the family asked that donations be sent to a favorite environmen­tal group, the Connecticu­t Fund for the Environmen­t/Save the Sound.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Julie Belaga receives the Sunrise Rotary of Westport Paul Harris Fellowship award at the Birchwood Country Club in 2010. Belaga died Friday night at her home at an assisted living facility in Westport. She was 91.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Julie Belaga receives the Sunrise Rotary of Westport Paul Harris Fellowship award at the Birchwood Country Club in 2010. Belaga died Friday night at her home at an assisted living facility in Westport. She was 91.

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