The Day

After prison, former congressma­n Grimm running for old seat

- Visiting Artist Lecture Savoy Fiction Book Club Classic Horror Film Owls of Connecticu­t Van Gogh's “Starry Night” Ledyard Garden Club Drop-In Storytime Babies and Books Fall Storytime Read, Sing, Play Family Safety Day By JENNIFER PELTZ

— 4:15 p.m., Connecticu­t College, 270 Mohegan Ave., New London; lecture by Claudia Hart in conjunctio­n with her exhibition “The Real-Fake.Org”; free; nassor@ conncoll.edu.

— 6 p.m., Savoy Bookshop and Cafe, 10 Canal St., Westerly; “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood; free; (401) 2133901.

— 6:30 p.m., Waterford Public Library, 49 Rope Ferry Road; free; (860) 444-5805.

— 7 p.m,. East Lyme Police Station Community Room, 278 Main St.; East Lyme Garden Club presentati­on by Laura Carver from the Denison Pequotsepo­s Nature Center; free; elgclub@gmail.com.

— 7 p.m., Groton Public Library, 52 Newtown Road; presentati­on by Connecticu­t College art history professor Robert Baldwin about the iconic painting’s role in a larger artistic movement; free; (860) 441-6750.

— 7 p.m., Ledyard Senior Center, 12 Van Tassel Drive, Gales Ferry; “The Cutting Garden — Off With Their Heads” with Michael Russo; free and open to the public; ledyardgar­denclub.org.

— 10 a.m., East Lyme Public Library, 39 Society Road; for all ages; free; (860) 739-6926.

— 10 a.m., Groton Public Library, 52 Newtown Road; for infants through age 2 with caregivers; free; limited seating; (860) 441-6750.

— 10:30 a.m., Bill Memorial Library, 240 Monument St., Groton; for ages 5 and under with a caregiver; free; registrati­on requested; (860) 445-0392.

— 10:30 a.m., Public Library of New London, 63 Huntington St.; for ages 5 and under with a caregiver; free; (860) 447-1411.

— 11 a.m.-noon, Bill Memorial Library, 240 Monument St., Groton; visit with McGruff and members of the Groton City Fire Department and Police Department; free; (860) 445-0392.

New York — He came to Congress with the law-andorder image of a former FBI agent and left as an admitted tax evader headed for prison. His tenure was shadowed by a campaign fundraisin­g investigat­ion and punctuated by a threat to hurl a reporter off a Capitol balcony.

But former U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm says voters want him back in Washington, and on Sunday, he announced he's going for his old job.

Grimm told a crowd of about 100 supporters: “Together we'll go to Washington and have our president's back.” He attacked the man he's trying to unseat for the Republican nomination, Dan Donovan, a former prosecutor who won the Staten Island-based district after Grimm resigned in 2015.

Grimm chastised Donovan, saying, “The swamp still needs to be drained. Let's start right here with my opponent.”

In a country with a history of political comebacks, Grimm isn't following the script of asking for second chances. He's all but challengin­g anyone to stop him.

“I'm gonna win,” Grimm, 47, recently told Fox News. “When I go out and I shake these hands, and people hug me, and they tell me in my ear, ‘You have no idea how many people are behind you,' I just know it.”

A Marine and Gulf War veteran, Grimm has long styled himself as a scrappy fighter for New York City's “forgotten borough.”

The thrice-elected congressma­n says his prosecutio­n and eight-month prison term were politicall­y driven and unfair. He casts himself as a political warrior ready to defend President Donald Trump's agenda against congressio­nal Republican­s with a “weak spine.” And he counts the support of Staten Island political patriarch Guy Molinari, a Republican former congressma­n and borough president.

But Grimm would face an incumbent with a long history in Staten Island politics, including 12 years as district attorney (his office didn't prosecute Grimm).

Donovan has the backing of the local and state Republican parties and a $300,000 campaign war chest; Grimm's old campaign coffer has $52,000 but bears $420,000 in legal debt, according to the latest filings in July. Both camps claim the other candidate is too liberal.

“We're not really worried about a challenge from a felon,” Donovan campaign spokeswoma­n Jessica Proud says. “The voters won't be duped by him again.”

A half-dozen Democrats have signaled plans to run in the swing district encompassi­ng Staten Island and a bit of Brooklyn.

Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee spokesman Evan Lukaske said Grimm's candidacy “demonstrat­es the serious harm that this do-nothing Congress is inflicting on vulnerable Republican incumbents.”

He added, “Ultimately, our Democratic candidate will face either a convicted felon or an ineffectiv­e and weak establishm­ent politician entangled in an embezzleme­nt scandal — a clear choice for voters on Staten Island and in Brooklyn.”

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