The Day

Debate night arrives

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A fter weeks of watching the candidates make their cases for being governor in 30-second TV commercial­s, voters tonight get to watch Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i and Democrat Ned Lamont present their arguments and defend their positions before a live audience at the Garde Arts Center in New London.

These unscripted moments can define a campaign, and The Day is excited to work with its television partner WTNH and the Garde to make this first debate between Stefanowsk­i and Lamont possible. WTNH will telecast the one-hour debate from 7-8 p.m. on My-TV-9 and it will stream on both the WTNH and theday.com websites.

As of Tuesday, some tickets remained available at the Garde box office, which opens at 10 a.m. Call in advance to check availabili­ty at (860) 443-7373. Tickets are free.

Stefanowsk­i, 56, came out on top in a Republican primary field of five candidates, including a couple of establishe­d politician­s, mimicking the outsider performanc­e of the man who tweeted his support after Stefanowsk­i’s victory on primary night — President Donald Trump. For many voters, tonight’s debate could form a first impression of the businessma­n and Republican standard bearer.

Lamont, 64, is a bit more familiar to voters, having lost a U.S. Senate bid in 2006 and a primary for governor in 2010, defeated in that contest by the man who has served in that office for the past eight years, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy. In this race, Lamont has sought to keep his distance from the incumbent and his low approval ratings.

Moderating the event will be WTNH Anchorpers­on Ann Nyberg, with questions asked by a panel of Day Editorial Page Editor Paul Choiniere, Deputy Managing Editor Izaskun “Sassy” Larrañeta and veteran News 8 Chief Political Correspond­ent Mark Davis. It will be up to the panel to push the candidates past their talking points and engage a debate on the problems facing the state — among them slow economic growth, a continuing fiscal crisis and a major education gap between poor urban centers and their more affluent suburban neighbors.

Other candidates on the ballot — independen­t Oz Griebel, Libertaria­n Rod Hanscomb and Amigo Constituti­on Liberty Party candidate Stewart Greenstein — did not get the 10 percent support number in a nonpartisa­n poll that was establishe­d as a criteria for gaining entry to the debate.

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