The Day

State’s election is about Trump, not Malloy

- DAVID COLLINS d.collins@theday.com

I ’m already tired of Connecticu­t Republican­s this election season, batting away questions about Donald Trump with retorts about the failings of Dannel Malloy.

I know a lot Democrats who will be as glad as Republican­s to see Malloy go. And make no mistake, he’s going. He’s not on the ballot, already a part of Connecticu­t’s political history. Forget about him.

Let’s talk about what’s really at stake. What is to be decided in this election, around the country and here in Connecticu­t, is much more important than Connecticu­t’s fiscal crisis or the various strategies from the left and right proposed for resolving it.

President Trump has highjacked the Republican Party and is putting at grave risk the very core values and institutio­ns that has made this country great.

Taking young children away from their families and holding them hostage, bargaining chips to score a political win, is evil and, for any sane Republican or Democrat, entirely indefensib­le. Confining them in secret holding cells, without allowing the public to see what’s going on, is continuing and alarming.

It’s clear the trauma inflicted on these children by the president is going to do lasting harm. More disturbing, it’s not clear this inept and corrupt government has the means to ever be able to reunite all of them with their parents, even if they found the will to. Many newscaster­s can’t help but shed tears as they explain this, a haunting new developmen­t I’ve never seen before in television news, through decades of Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

This is not an America any one of us should want to be a part of.

President Trump has surrounded himself with the self-dealing and corrupt, no more than common grifters who are more interested in using their offices and access to make money than to help the country. The money collected by the president’s personal lawyer from companies and people with business before the government became a virtual slush fund for payoffs. Cabinet secretarie­s and Trump’s own family are piggishly enriching themselves.

The attorney general of New York says the Trump charitable foundation was used for personal and political gain. How much more despicable can you get?

President Trump has been spitting on our closest allies and cozying up to the world’s autocrats and despots.

Most frightenin­g, Trump foreign policy, undoing our strategic alliances in North America and Europe, would probably be exactly the foreign policy of Vladimir Putin, were he in the Oval Office.

Indeed, he probably is. We won’t have final proof, although we have

lots of evidence, until special counsel Robert Mueller finishes his investigat­ion.

No wonder that highest on Trump’s agenda are his efforts to undermine Mueller, by attacking the institutio­ns of law enforcemen­t and justice that have kept our country safe for generation­s. This, too, must please Putin.

The guilty pleas of two top-ranking Trump associates, one jailed without bond, is certainly evidence enough that the investigat­ion needs to continue. The special counsel also has laid out extensive evidence in indictment­s that Russia meddled in our election with the intent of electing Trump.

Like a petty criminal, Trump is attacking police and prosecutor­s, a bedrock of the country. It’s not the behavior of an innocent, someone who can count on a jury of peers or an appropriat­e forum to exonerate.

As president, he works to divide and not to unite, for his own greedy and heartless ends.

Here in Connecticu­t, we have elected a delegation to Washington willing to stand up to Trump when Republican­s there turn the other way. But we can’t let Connecticu­t Republican­s running for office get away with not addressing the rot at the head of their party.

I care, too, about the cronyism by Connecticu­t Democrats in Hartford, with their sweet-dealing appointmen­ts and judgeships. I’d like to use my vote to rid the government of leadership by and for the benefit of municipal unions.

But the 2018 elections certainly will be among the most important many of us Americans have ever voted in. Connecticu­t residents, in a state that isn’t going to send Republican­s to Washington anyway, need to make sure that anyone we vote for here vows to clean up their party.

I can’t vote for any Republican who won’t renounce Trump.

I believe those who vote for or defend Trump are entirely complicit in his divisivene­ss and ugly racism and enabling the greedy use of American institutio­ns for corrupt ends.

The election is in full swing here. The microphone­s are on ladies and gentlemen running for office on a Republican ticket.

We know what you think of Dannel Malloy. Tell us what you think of your president.

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