The Day

In Cleveland,

- By MARK PAZNIOKAS

the Mashantuck­et Pequot and Mohegan tribes sponsored a cruise for Connecticu­t delegates to the Republican National Convention. In Philadelph­ia, the tribes’ sponsorshi­p of a breakfast gave them some face time with the governor, three U.S. senators, two U.S. House members and other Connecticu­t officials and activists to make their case for casino expansion.

Philadelph­ia — Sen. Jon Tester of Montana had two reasons for being the featured speaker Tuesday at a breakfast sponsored by the owners of Connecticu­t’s two tribal casinos: He is the ranking Democrat on an Indian Affairs subcommitt­ee, and he is overseeing Democrats’ expensive campaign to take back control of the Senate.

In his first job, Tester is in a position to help the Mashantuck­et Pequot and Mohegan tribes in a fight against MGM Resorts Internatio­nal over their right to jointly develop their first casino off tribal lands.

In his second job as rainmaker for the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the tribes have helped him with checks of $10,000 and $5,000.

Tester told Connecticu­t delegates to the Democratic National Convention that he is a solid ally of the tribes. Not only is MGM coming into the Connecticu­t market with a casino in Springfiel­d, the Nevada gambling giant is trying to pass federal legislatio­n that would bar the tribes from developing a casino off their reservatio­ns to compete with Springfiel­d.

“The truth is when you’ve got the big boys, really big boys coming in, it’s a real problem,” said Tester, a two-term senator who still farms in Montana. “I can tell you, it’s kinda like a vacuum cleaner sucking the money out of the state. It won’t be around. So we’ve got to fight, as we have in the past.”

The two tribes sponsored a river and lake cruise for Connecticu­t delegates to the Republican National Convention in Cleveland, where there were few office holders to lobby.

Here, the tribes’ sponsorshi­p of a breakfast gave them some casual face time with the governor, three U.S. senators, two U.S. House members and other Connecticu­t officials

and activists.

Corporate sponsorshi­ps are a staple of modern political convention­s.

Today, Pfizer will sponsor a Connecticu­t delegation breakfast featuring Congressma­n John Lewis of Georgia. AT&T is the sponsor for a breakfast Thursday featuring Labor Secretary Tom Perez, Education Secretary John King and Chris Dodd, the former U.S. senator who now is the face of the motion-picture industry in Washington.

Dodd, who came to the Connecticu­t breakfast Tuesday, said the sponsorshi­ps are about building relationsh­ips.

“You’re here, the press is here covering it,” Dodd said. “It’s not like it’s some secret meeting.”

The packet handed to every Connecticu­t delegate included a memorandum about state ethics laws for delegates who might be public officials or state employees. In general, they cannot accept food and drink worth more than $50 from an interest with a registered lobbyist. The sponsors are required to file ethics reports on their wining and dining.

The Mashantuck­et Pequots paid a $40,000 fine for throwing parties in 2000 at the Republican National Convention in Philadelph­ia and the Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. The tribe exceeded the gift limit and failed to make a report on the nine officials covered by the ethics code in L.A. and 15 in Philly.

Guests at breakfast had to sign in today.

Rodney Butler, the tribal chairman of the Mashantuck­et Pequots, is hardly a political outsider. He is a Hillary Clinton delegate to the convention. On Tuesday, his cohost for breakfast was Kathy Regan-Pyne, a member of the Mohegan Tribal Council.

The tribes are seeking legislatio­n in the Connecticu­t General Assembly that would allow them to jointly build a casino in the I-91 corridor between Hartford and the Massachuse­tts line to compete with MGM Resorts. In Washington, they’ve had to fight the effort by MGM to pass a federal law that would take the decision away from Connecticu­t.

MGM’s team includes former Sen. Joseph I. Lieberman of Connecticu­t and Roy Occhiogros­so, a former top adviser to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy. MGM also has hired former Attorney General Eric Holder.

Butler said he and Lieberman still are on civil terms.

“I talked to Joe about it. Look, it’s a job. We have a very long, good relationsh­ip, so it is what it is,” Butler said.

Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., tried to amend the Senate National Defense Authorizat­ion Act by including a provision that would bar Indian gaming off tribal lands. Butler said the MGM play in Washington, where the company also was backed by Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, was heavy-handed and racially discrimina­tory.

“We thought it important to highlight it. It’s almost Trump-like. It kind of works well with this delegation,” Butler said. “That bill specifical­ly targeted Indians and said, ‘Yeah, tribes, you stay on your reservatio­n. Don’t do gaming outside of that, or we’re going to try to shut you down.’ What country is this, you know?”

Foxwoods Resorts Casino and Mohegan Sun collective­ly employ 15,000 workers in eastern Connecticu­t, where the Pequots and Mohegans have built two of the world’s largest casinos. But they are losing market share to casinos in New York, Rhode Island and, soon, in Springfiel­d.

U.S. Rep. Joe Courtney, whose 2nd District is home to both tribal casinos, said he was eager to protect those jobs.

“This is an owner that’s not going anywhere. These guys were here before Connecticu­t. These are people who are in it for the long haul,” Courtney told the Connecticu­t delegates. “They’re just always looking at the long game, and we really have to do everything that we possibly can to help them.”

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