The Day

When I look at state Republican­s, I see Trump RESTORATIO­N PROJECT CONTINUES

- This is the opinion of David Collins.

One interestin­g comment that caught my attention in the many thorough video interviews with 2018 General Assembly candidates on www.theday.com was something said by Bob Statchen, the Air Force veteran who is running against state Sen. Heather Somers for the 18th District seat she holds.

“First, Connecticu­t has to remember how great it is, and how we are a good state with many strengths,” Statchen said, going on to talk about the high number of Connecticu­t employees with advanced degrees, a high national ranking for private research and developmen­t investment and a leadership role in advanced manufactur­ing, for which the state is known around the world.

Indeed, I think it is a defining characteri­stic in Connecticu­t politics, where the only optimism I hear comes from Democrats. Like Republican­s on the national stage, with a dark message about immigratio­n and demonizing a ragtag caravan of frightened Honduran refugees, I hear only pessimism from Connecticu­t Republican­s.

I know there is a financial crisis here, one that has festered through the administra­tions of Republican and Democratic governors and through the most recent General Assembly sessions, which were at almost bipartisan parity.

But it is enthusiasm, confidence, advocacy for good and fair public policy and an optimistic spirit toward this great state that will save us, not mean-spirited budget cutting, scapegoati­ng the unfortunat­e, decrying diversity and providing windfall tax breaks for the wealthy.

Blame Dan Malloy for not fixing what was broken if you must. But remember, he’s gone. Trump is still with us.

Trumpism has sadly taken hold here in the Connecticu­t GOP, with Trump-like name calling and even attacks on women’s rights. I heard one of the region’s most prominent Republican officehold­ers mocking Dr. Christine Blasey Ford on the radio for the way she pulled her blond hair from her eyes while delivering before the Senate her painful account of sexual assault.

Republican­s viciously attacked a Democratic selectwoma­n for kneeling during the pledge of allegiance, a quiet and heartfelt protest that may have been misguided but hardly deserved so much angry attention.

All five Republican candidates in the gubernator­ial primary graded our divisive, misogynist­ic, race-baiting, violence-encouragin­g president with an “A.” The primary winner was caught at a social event right here in Connecticu­t with a prominent white nationalis­t. The GOP gubernator­ial candidate’s ridiculous and unexplaine­d plan to eliminate the state income tax is out of the Trump

playbook to further reward the rich. A promise to end the Connecticu­t income tax, half our revenue, is also as absurd as promising that Mexico will pay for a border wall.

Like Trump, who cheated Trump University students out of millions and treated his charitable foundation as a tax-evading piggy bank, the candidate for governor here last ran a payday loan business considered so unethical it is not even legal in Connecticu­t.

Don’t get me wrong. There are some moderate, reasonable Republican­s running for the General Assembly, and if I lived in their districts I might have a hard time not voting for them. But I couldn’t, at least not this year, no matter how unappealin­g their Democratic opponents may be.

This is an election like no other I can remember in my lifetime, and I’m old.

We live in a political ecosystem in which party matters, and I don’t see how you can vote Republican here in Connecticu­t while the American Republican establishm­ent selfishly participat­es in the president’s attacks, not just on the press but on the country’s intelligen­ce and criminal justice system.

Trump is essentiall­y under criminal investigat­ion for treason, a prospect that does not seem the least unlikely, given his performanc­e groveling before Vladimir Putin in Helsinki, his attack on America’s NATO allies and the growing number of guilty pleas by his close associates.

That criminal probe is on pause, while we vote.

So vote for the good guys in the white hats, not the cynical ones who are attacking the fine people of the country’s intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t agencies, dedicated and loyal Americans, profession­als who keep us safe.

Connecticu­t is a great place to live. Vote with its optimists.

 ?? SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY ?? Shipwright Tom Daniels takes photos as staff from Arnold M. Graton Associates work with Mystic Seaport Museum staff to remove the last of the steel support I beams from the Mayflower II on Tuesday at museum’s H.B. duPont Preservati­on Shipyard. The ship, a replica of the vessel that brought the Pilgrims to the new world in 1620 and built in 1957 in England as a gift to the United States in thanks for support during and after World War II, is an attraction at Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth, Mass., and is more than halfway through a 30-month restoratio­n at the shipyard in preparatio­n to sail it again on the 400th anniversar­y of the Pilgrims’ voyage.
SEAN D. ELLIOT/THE DAY Shipwright Tom Daniels takes photos as staff from Arnold M. Graton Associates work with Mystic Seaport Museum staff to remove the last of the steel support I beams from the Mayflower II on Tuesday at museum’s H.B. duPont Preservati­on Shipyard. The ship, a replica of the vessel that brought the Pilgrims to the new world in 1620 and built in 1957 in England as a gift to the United States in thanks for support during and after World War II, is an attraction at Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth, Mass., and is more than halfway through a 30-month restoratio­n at the shipyard in preparatio­n to sail it again on the 400th anniversar­y of the Pilgrims’ voyage.
 ?? d.collins@theday.com ?? DAVID COLLINS
d.collins@theday.com DAVID COLLINS

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