The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

From foe to champion

Ex-gov. discusses her evolution on campaign finance, lauds new caps

- By Jack Kramer CTNEWSJUNK­IE.COM

NEW BRITAIN — The person most people credit for reforming Connecticu­t’s campaign laws 12 years ago endorsed a proposal to increase qualifying donations from $100 to $250 for clean election candidates.

“I think that’s fair,” former Republican Gov. M. Jodi Rell said at a forum at Central Connecticu­t State University Thursday. “But, I’d like to see it stay there (at $250) for awhile.”

Currently to obtain public financing, candidates must demonstrat­e grassroots support by raising funds — $5,000 for a House candidate and $15,000 for a Senate candidate — in no more than $100 increments.

But in the budget passed Thursday by the House and the Senate, that $100 ceiling was increased to $250. Gov. Dannel P. Malloy would still have to sign it for it to become law.

It was one of several smaller changes to the program that came out of the bipartisan budget compromise. While

Republican­s had proposed completely eliminatin­g the Citizens Election Program as part of the budget Malloy vetoed in September, the program created in 2005 was funded as part of the compromise budget.

In addition to increasing the $100 donation ceiling to $250, the legislatio­n also puts a one-year cap on election investigat­ions instead of an open-ended time period.

The legislatio­n requires staff to conduct a preliminar­y investigat­ion of any allegation­s within 14 days, and requires the staff to docket a complaint for a probable-cause hearing by the commission for any complaint that it is unable to resolve within 45 days after receipt.

Cutting the investigat­ions to one year is a concern for Cheri Quickmire, executive director of Common Cause.

The shortened time period “would guarantee less accountabi­lity over these funds and encourage unscrupulo­us individual­s to play beat the clock around investigat­ions,” the coalition said.

Michael Brandi, executive director and general counsel of the State Elections Enforcemen­t Commission, who was at the CCSU forum Thursday, reserved remarks about the change.

“We’re happy the program remains in effect and we’ll be reviewing the rest of the language,” Brandi said. “I haven’t seen the actual language inside the overall bill yet so it’s difficult to make more of a comment right this second.”

Thursday’s forum focused on the Citizens Election Program, which, according to proponents, became the nation’s most comprehens­ive, publicly financed campaign system.

The law establishi­ng the program was passed after Rell’s predecesso­r, John G. Rowland, resigned from office in 2004 during a corruption investigat­ion. He later pleaded guilty in federal court to a one-count indictment for conspiracy to commit honest services fraud, mail fraud and tax fraud.

In 2014, Rowland was indicted on seven counts for his role in a subsequent election fraud case. He is currently serving his sentence in a minimum security prison in Pennsylvan­ia, awaiting early release slated for May of next year.

Rell said one of the things people forget is that she wasn’t initially in favor of campaign-finance reform.

“It’s taxpayer money,” Rell told the audience. “We’re not going to use taxpayer money to fund candidates’ brochures and their little twist off top things that you get from every candidate, or pencils or flyers of whatever. No, we’re not going to do it.”

“And then we started to see more and more and more influence of money,” Rell continued. “And I remember as lieutenant governor thinking this bill comes up every year. We’re going to be dealing with this; why don’t we really put together a group and talk about it? Well, it didn’t materializ­e.”

Rell went on: “When I became governor, there was more and more push to say let’s do something. Let’s literally do something about the influence of money in campaigns.”

But Rell said there were still obstacles, and it took a special session of the General Assembly, which she called, to finally push the landmark legislatio­n through.

The former governor said there are other reasons she believes public financing needs to be championed.

“Asking for money is probably the worst thing that any of us have to do,” Rell said. She said a program that puts less of a burden on raising money allows candidates to focus more on issues facing the state.

She said “it’s also brought more candidates than ever” into the political arena.

She said she’s also proud of the fact that the publicfina­ncing law has an impact on more than the “big races.”

Rell said it’s important that public financing impacts Senate and House races for General Assembly and not just contests such as races for governor.

Rell suggested a possible way to funnel more money back into the public financing system is to put lower caps on the amounts candidates running unopposed can raise — and spend.

“Perhaps some of those excess funds can be funneled back into the election program,” Rell said.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Former Connecticu­t Governor M. Jodi Rell
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Former Connecticu­t Governor M. Jodi Rell
 ?? Jack Kramer/CTNewsJunk­ie ?? Former Gov. Jodi Rell
Jack Kramer/CTNewsJunk­ie Former Gov. Jodi Rell

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