The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Unions, Connecticu­t’s 4th branch of government

- Don Pesci Columnist Don Pesci is a writer who lives in Vernon. E-mail him at donpesci@att.net.

July 18 is a pivotal date in Connecticu­t’s budget-making process, and that is what is wrong with the state’s budget making process.

During the first week of July, the Connecticu­t Post noted in an editorial, “As of now, the next special session to vote on a budget is not scheduled until July 18. Not by coincidenc­e, perhaps, that happens to be the day before the State Employees Bargaining Agent Coalition [SEBAC] is scheduled to finish voting on contract concession­s negotiated by Malloy.”

Generally in politics, things happen as they do because politician­s who control events want them to happen in a certain way. Political business in the House of Representa­tives is controlled by the Speaker of the House, without whose assent bills are not reported to the floor. Democrats did not bring a budget to the floor on June 7, when the legislatur­e was due to close, because Democrats had no budget. Republican­s, who did have a budget in hand that had been vetted and declared balanced by the state’s budget office, were not permitted to bring their budget to the floor for an open discussion. House Speaker Joe Aresimowic­z, the budget gatekeeper in the General Assembly, wanted it that way.

Both Republican­s and Gov. Dannel Malloy then produced mini-budgets that were not voted upon, after which Malloy assumed plenary powers to keep the state running until union-employed Speaker of the House Joe Aresimowic­z was prepared to open a discussion on the budget that should have been finalized on June 7; that was the date during which a Democrat budget acceptable to Aresimowic­z’s caucus should have been presented to the General Assembly for discussion and a vote. Aresimowic­z also should have allowed debate on the loyal opposition’s budget.

None of this occurred, because Aresimowic­z and Malloy, the nominal head of the Democratic Party in Connecticu­t, did not want any vote on any budget before July 18. Well then, the reader may ask, what was so special about July 18?

Mark Pazniokas and Keith Phaneuf of CTMirror noted in a June 29 report: “Instead of a vote on a mini-budget, House Democratic leaders tried to refocus attention off the failings of the day and onto July 18, when they say they intend to vote on a twoyear budget that would protect municipal aid and hospitals, but also would raise the sales tax from 6.35 percent to 6.99 percent.”

Aresimowic­z was quoted in the CTMirror report to this effect: “House Democrats, really happy to announce that we are putting forward a twoyear budget to address the many fiscal situations we’re finding in our state.” And, as was pointedly noted in the report, “He [Aresimowic­z] said the day House Democrats hope to vote is one day after state-employee unions are to complete their voting on whether to ratify a tentative concession­s deal.”

In the General Assembly, things happen the way they do because Democrat General Assembly leaders, as well as the state’s highly unpopular lame-duck Democratic governor, want them to happen as they do. Malloy, who recently assumed plenary powers, did not want the Republican alternativ­e budget to be brought to the floor for debate, and the Republican budget was snuffed in its crib — likely because Republican­s had, since the beginning of Malloy’s first term, gained seats in both the House and Senate.

The party split in the Senate is now 18 Democrats, 18 Republican­s; and, in recent years, Republican­s have drawn uncomforta­bly close to Democrats in the House as well. There the split is 79 Democrats, 72 Republican­s — too close for comfort. Moreover, there is in the General Assembly a moderate Democrat rump faction that occasional­ly votes with Republican­s against destructiv­e progressiv­e policies.

Democrats need to bake into their budget contractua­l agreements that will not be voted upon by rank and file union members until the 18th, if then. The contracts project dubious savings of $1.5 billion, and the Malloy-Aresimowic­z-SEBAC deal extends the terms of the contracts until 2027, thus preventing future governors from realizing future savings until the contracts are terminated.

That is the fait accompli Democrats hope to impose upon a future governor and legislatur­e. On the other side of the political barricades, Republican­s want to change from contract to statute the process according to which budgets are formed, and in this way recover democratic legislativ­e authority over the budget making process. If Republican­s do not succeed during the current legislativ­e session in enacting reforms that have been in the Republican pipeline for many years, they may succeed at the polls in capturing both the governor’s office and one, possibly two houses in the General Assembly.

factcheck@middletown press.com and let us know if there is more to add or something to correct in one of our stories. Also see our fact check blog http://middletown­press factcheck.blogspot.com for some of our clarificat­ions, correction­s and additions to stories. You can report errors anonymousl­y, or provide an email and/or other contact informatio­n so that we can confirm receipt and/or action on the matter, and ask you to clarify if necessary. We can’t guarantee a mistake-free newspaper and website, but we can pledge to be transparen­t about how we deal with and correct mistakes.

In the General Assembly, things happen the way they do because Democrat General Assembly leaders, as well as the state’s highly unpopular lame-duck Democratic governor, want them to happen as they do.

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and

 ?? MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy speaks after receiving the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award at the John F. Kennedy Presidenti­al Library in Boston. Records of Malloy’s 2015 public schedule obtained by The Associated Press show he does not meet...
MICHAEL DWYER — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Connecticu­t Gov. Dannel P. Malloy speaks after receiving the John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award at the John F. Kennedy Presidenti­al Library in Boston. Records of Malloy’s 2015 public schedule obtained by The Associated Press show he does not meet...
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