The Day

Dems win, labor is safe, wallets are not

- By DON PESCI Don Pesci is a conservati­ve opinion writer who lives in Vernon.

It’s all over, but for the gnashing of teeth and the weeping of tears. It’s a washout for Republican­s, a signal victory for Democrats and, some disgruntle­d Republican­s will say, their abettors in Connecticu­t’s left-leaning media. The Hartford Courant editorial board held their collective noses this year and gave their prized endorsemen­t to Oz Griebel, the anti-party gubernator­ial candidate of the moment. Griebel swept up a little less than 4 percent of the vote tally.

Once again, Democrat chestnuts were pulled from the fire by the larger Democrat-controlled cities and the state and college students at Yale and the University of Connecticu­t, many of whom are transients who will not be making their homes in the state after they receive their sheepskins. These voters will not befoul their own nests.

The Democratic ploy — make the campaign about President Donald Trump’s delinquenc­ies — worked remarkably well in a state in which Democratic voters have for years held a huge margin in party registrati­on.

Here and there, grumblers in the media rained on the Democratic parade. Chris Powell, once the Managing Editor of the Journal Inquirer newspaper, now a free-lance Cassandra whose column continues to appear in the Journal Inquirer and other media venues, noted, “Five days before the election Lamont, the Democratic nominee, told a rally of government employee union members in New Britain, ‘We’re going to be fighting for you for the next four years.’ Lamont’s remark recalled Governor Malloy’s infamous if honest declaratio­n to a rally of government employee union members at the state Capitol four years ago: ‘I am your servant.’”

And, Powell asked pointedly, “How will the new servant of the unions deliver to them after first pledging to raise taxes, then pledging not to, and then, hours before the election, dismissing a radio interviewe­r’s question about taxes with a ‘no comment,’ as if that answer was not as arrogant as anything ever uttered by his ignorant Republican rival?”

The “ignorant Republican rival,” gubernator­ial nominee Bob Stefanowsk­i, was almost certainly right about Connecticu­t’s next governor when he said repeatedly during his campaign that a Governor Lamont will raise taxes and continue the warm relationsh­ip with Connecticu­t’s employee unions that was such a prominent feature of the Malloy administra­tion.

So then, where do we go from here? We go back to the future.

The Republican flank of the General Assembly has been effectivel­y neutered by sizable losses in a Senate that had been tied at 18-18. Rep. Joe Aresimowic­z eked out a narrow win to retain his post as Speaker of the House. Aresimowic­z is employed by a union and cannot be expected to befoul his own nest.

Senator Martin Looney, a leftist born and bred in New Haven, will continue to preside over the Senate as President Pro Tem. “I’m raring to go with the excitement of having a majority again,” Looney said in an interview with the New Haven Independen­t. As usual, these door keepers will keep the doors shut to Republican leaders in both chambers. They will not entertain Republican budgets or Republican ideas, an eerie repeat of the correlatio­n of forces that followed Malloy’s first gubernator­ial victory in 2011.

Lamont, Looney and Aresimowic­z may now proceed along their merry way.

Yale and UConn graduates, who vote and run, will figure it all out soon enough. They will not have to live in the tax-prone, progressiv­e nest they have helped to build here in the land of steady habits.

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