The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Word of advice: Listen up Connecticu­t Republican­s

- Susan Bigelow Susan Bigelow is an award-winning columnist and the founder of CTLocalPol­itics. She lives in Enfield with her wife and their cats.

It figures, doesn’t it? You write a budget that is sloppily out of balance and needlessly cruel, just to relieve the boredom of being the permanent minority party, and then all of the sudden some Democrats with a grudge vote for it — and it passes. Instead of being an afterthoug­ht and a punchline, you’re suddenly a government-in-waiting.

Welcome back, Connecticu­t republican­s. It’s been a while.

How long, exactly? We did have two Republican governors from 1995-2011, but during those years the party in the legislatur­e only controlled the Senate for a brief while, from 1995-97. The last time a Republican budget passed and was sent to the governor was in the summer of 1995, and then it was considerab­ly easier. A Republican, John G. Rowland, was governor, and the GOP had a clear majority in the state senate.

Everything since has been all about decline. Republican­s lost the state senate in 1996, and the party in the legislatur­e and the state’s Republican governors began to drift apart. When M. Jodi Rell was governor, it often seemed as if she and the Republican members of the House and Senate were from two different parties. Republican­s were all but wiped out in the mid-2000s, when Democrats managed to build a supermajor­ity in both chambers.

They’ve slowly come back lately, as the public sours on Democratic ineptitude, constant financial crisis, and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy. They drew even in the Senate in 2016, and there are plenty of people who think they’ll snatch a chamber or two away from Democrats in 2018. No one, though, was prepared for them to be this relevant this early.

The governor vetoed their budget on Thursday. But Republican­s cobbled together a majority on the budget once, and they can do it again. The balance of power has shifted, and Republican­s, for once, have the upper hand.

If you’ll take it, Republican­s, I have some words of advice.

First, don’t get too comfortabl­e. This is a blip, the universe burped and spotted you one. Those Democrats voted against their own leaders and against the futility of their own garbage bag of a budget, they didn’t so much vote for yours. You don’t have an actual majority yet.

You may never. It feels like your party is in great shape to win both the governorsh­ip and the legislatur­e next year. Things change, though. It’s starting to look like Republican­s are going to get slammed nationwide. A wave election could sweep you away.

So use the time you have wisely. Make the most of it. Figure out the most important things and act on them, work like you’re running out of time. Democrats got complacent and comfortabl­e, and look what happened to them!

Second, I don’t know if you’re aware of this, but your party has a minor image problem around here. It has to do with the animated can of Cheez Whiz you nominated for president last year, yes, but it also has to do with all the stuff Republican­s have been pulling across the country for over a decade. Climate change denial? Check. Weird and cruel health care policies? Got ‘em. Throwing gasoline into the dumpster fire of our culture wars? Oh yes. As evidence of all three, I submit Roy Moore, who just won his U.S. Senate primary in Alabama.

There’s a belief that Connecticu­t Republican­s are more moderate and reasonable. This is less true than I’d like. Still, you may want to play that up. Distance yourself from the national party. Put some daylight between you and President Donald J. Trump. Don’t entertain your fringe. Shove the monsters under the rug. Tell GOP state chairman J.R. Romano to stop sending out sneering, ranting emails — just for a little while.

The thing is, Connecticu­t could really use a rational center-right party. Please pretend that’s you for a little while.

And lastly. … for God’s sake don’t blow it.

I want you to succeed. I love this state, and I want it to be a better place. I watched House Minority Leader Themis Klarides speak on the night the budget passed about how so many people say they just want to leave, and how demoralizi­ng that was, and it hit me right in the heart.

So please, hold your fragile coalition together. Make hard but necessary choices. Force some kind of fundamenta­l change in the budget. Don’t give up until you get it.

Good luck.

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