The Day

Could Nancy Wyman be this state’s Hillary?

- This is the opinion of David Collins.

When I stopped a voter Tuesday on her way inside the Baltic Fire Department and asked what she thought about Gov. Dannel Malloy’s performanc­e in office, it took an excruciati­ngly long time to elicit an answer.

I could tell this was a loyal Democrat who did not want to be critical. And yet she couldn’t seem to find any words of praise.

“He tried to do the right thing,” she finally offered up. Ouch. And yet I would have to agree. The well-intentione­d former mayor of Stamford has tried his best to referee competing interests: taxpayers, state employees and their powerful unions, businesses, the disadvanta­ged, struggling cities.

Seeking a bridge to new economic developmen­t and prosperity, Malloy sought a path forward that involved what he once characteri­zed as shared sacrifice.

I think the budget breakdown this year and the legislatur­e’s final end-around the governor gave Malloy a lasting failing grade. I will remember the budget battle mostly for his shameful scare-mongering press conference at the University of Connecticu­t at Avery Point, when he warned, unreasonab­ly, out of petty political expediency, that Republican­s were going to force a shutdown of that campus.

Lawmakers of both parties finally found consensus and a passed a budget without the governor.

If Malloy had not already declined to run for another term as governor, this budget cycle would have killed any chance of success he might have expected.

Now that Tuesday’s voting has shown that Connecticu­t voters are itching to express outrage at the toxic Republican morass in Washington, an administra­tion of billionair­es, protected by enablers in Congress and gunning for the entitlemen­ts and safety nets for the middle class and poor, the path for a Democrat in the wide-open Connecticu­t gubernator­ial race seems like a straight shot.

Another voter, so outraged by the only thinly veiled racism of preserve-the-statues, build-a-wall GOP Trumpists, told me Tuesday he will never vote for another Republican again.

I worry, though, the fix may already be in among the Connecticu­t Democratic establishm­ent to get behind Nancy Wyman, Malloy’s hyper-loyal deputy, the two-term lieutenant governor, as their candidate.

This could be the one certain way to lose what has become a clear competitiv­e advantage in 2018 for Democrats, packaging up and trying to sell all the Malloy baggage with a Wyman label.

Let’s be honest. There is no way to separate the two. Wyman as a gubernator­ial candidate is Malloy 2.0.

Barely an inch has separated them on a single issue or policy throughout these two terms. Putting up a Malloy surrogate could be the one way Democrats find a way to lose.

After all, the same Connecticu­t Democratic establishm­ent unwisely closed ranks around Hillary Clinton when it was obvious that Bernie Sanders, like Trump, had a better fix on the malaise of voters looking for change.

The good thing for Connecticu­t Democrats is that the Connecticu­t Republican establishm­ent has never put down its Trump pom poms, even though it was obvious that the chaotic atmosphere and mean spiritedne­ss of the administra­tion in Washington was not going to play well even with Yankee conservati­ves here in Connecticu­t.

Former U.S. Rep. Chris Shays, the last Connecticu­t Republican to eke out a Washington legislativ­e seat, saw this early in the arc of Trumpism, but was drowned out by the fawning praise from law- makers like Themis Klarides, House minority leader, and our own state Sen. Art Linares of Westbrook.

I hope Klarides runs for governor, putting her Trump loyalty to a statewide voter test. And good luck, too, to Linares as he admits to casting about for a statewide office for which he can run.

I believe Democrats can hit a home run in 2018, especially as Trump campaign treason comes into sharper focus with more charges from the Russia investigat­ion. But this will happen only if they manage to dump the Malloy baggage.

Please, anyone but Wyman, who may be an exceptiona­l candidate but who will never be able to step out of the dark Malloy shadow, even in her trademark tippy high heels.

 ?? DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com ??
DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

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