The Day

State GOP is losing people

More than 600 have left the party since attack on the Capitol

- By JULIA BERGMAN Day Staff Writer

More than 600 registered Republican­s in New London County have left the party since the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

The trend is also playing out statewide. More than 5,000 Connecticu­t Republican­s changed their political party affiliatio­n in the six weeks following the breach.

Current and former Republican­s interviewe­d for this article said while former President Donald Trump is partly to blame, the reasons for the exodus are more complex than that and include hostility faced by members of the party after the Capitol attack.

Groton City Republican­s also cited the “hostile and threatenin­g environmen­t” in announcing they wouldn’t run a slate in this year’s municipal elections because their prospectiv­e candidates had backed out.

“The climate from Jan. 6 on has been that Republican­s have been attacked for their beliefs, so a lot have changed (their party) to unaffiliat­ed,” said Colleen Rix, a member of the Montville Republican Town Committee. “However, they still lean conservati­ve.”

Like Rix, Kat Goulart, chairwoman of the New London Republican Town Committee, also has heard from Republican­s who say they are leaving the party due to the backlash they face for expressing their views.

“That is something that I have heard from local Republican­s in and around New London that they’re dealing with that they’re just tired of,” Goulart said. “They aren’t changing (their party affiliatio­n) because their values have changed. They’re changing because they’re tired of being bullied.”

She said it’s not uncommon to see large numbers of voters change their parties following an election cycle. “A lot of people will identify with a major party during municipal and presidenti­al elections and then switch back to unaffiliat­ed,” she said. “We see that every two and four years. Certainly the Democrats are seeing losses as well.”

While the Democratic Party also lost members following the Capitol attack, the number is dwarfed by the Republican Party’s decline in membership.

In New London County, Republican­s left the party at five times the rate of registered Democrats between Jan. 6 and Feb. 19, according to state voter registrati­on data. Many registered as unaffiliat­ed voters instead.

In 2017, the year Trump was sworn in to office, just 72 Republican­s in New London County left the party between Jan. 6 and Feb. 16, compared to the 621 who left the party over that same period this year.

That’s in comparison to the 262 Democrats in the county who changed their party registrati­on in the first six weeks of 2021, and 274 who changed from unaffiliat­ed. In 2017, eight Democrats and 189 unaffiliat­ed voters left their respective parties over that same time period.

Stuart Norman was a registered Republican for more than 50 years until Trump, at a news conference early in the COVID-19 pandemic, suggested people inject themselves with disinfecta­nts to rid themselves of the coronaviru­s.

In reality, it was a series of decisions made by Trump, including his response to the pandemic, and his behavior that pushed Norman to leave the party. But that comment from the former president “was the final straw.”

“I was a proud Republican,” Norman said. “It was not easy.”

He changed his party affiliatio­n a short while later, choosing to register as a Democrat instead of an independen­t or unaffiliat­ed voter, due to Connecticu­t’s closed primary system that allows only registered members of a political party to vote in that party’s primary elections.

“In my mind, you have to belong to a party because then you are able to participat­e in picking a candidate in the primary,” he said. “Sometimes that can be more critical than the general (election).”

Trump also led Theresa Madonna, a Republican who ran for state Senate against Democrat Andrew Maynard in the 18th District, to leave the party in fall 2020. She registered as a Democrat just before the presidenti­al election.

“His policies went beyond fiscal conservati­sm, which is the reason I was a Republican,” Madonna said, specifical­ly citing Trump’s policies on immigratio­n.

While she’s not “enamored” with the Democratic Party either, Madonna said she feels more aligned with Democrats at this point than Republican­s. Plus, she wants to continue serving locally in politics “and you just can’t get elected if you’re an independen­t.”

“Four years of Donald Trump has been a problem for some,” said Rob Simmons, a Republican who represente­d Connecticu­t in Congress and is a former Stonington first selectman.

“I’m moderate. I consider myself a fiscal conservati­ve,” Simmons said. “I supported Donald Trump’s policies because fiscally, I found them to be quite successful, but his personalit­y, his mannerism, his behaviors did not appeal to some Republican­s who had to explain him and found it embarrassi­ng to explain him.”

Simmons sees the recent resignatio­n of Connecticu­t Republican Party chairman J.R. Romano, who was “constantly beating the drum for Donald Trump,” as an opportunit­y for his party.

With Romano gone, Simmons said he hopes the state GOP will move away from national politics and refocus its efforts on getting Republican­s elected to statewide offices.

“We have an opportunit­y now over the next few months to begin to build back toward the middle, to get beyond the Trump presidency,” he said.

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