The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Gov. Griebel: Are visions of Weicker dancing in his head?

- TERRY COWGILL

The world is full of dreamers. And that’s a good thing. Dreamers make the impossible possible. In the words of Robert F. Kennedy, nondreamer­s say “why,” but “I dream of things that never were, and ask why not?”

And of course there is the modern incarnatio­n of the word, the so-called “DREAMers” — the 800,000 or so young migrants caught in legal limbo by the machinatio­ns of President Trump, Congress and the immigratio­n code.

Now it seems Connecticu­t has its own dreamer in the form of a 68-year-old wise man who until recently ran the regional chamber of commerce and now wants to mount an independen­t campaign for governor. Oz Griebel made it official earlier this month when he announced his candidacy in a news conference at the Capitol.

As if to emphasize the unconventi­onal nature of his candidacy, Griebel, who failed in a bid for the Republican gubernator­ial nomination in 2010, stepped up to the microphone with his running mate, erstwhile Democrat Monte Frank, of Newtown, a municipal attorney and a litigator at one of the largest law firms in the state — and past president of the Connecticu­t and the New England bar associatio­ns.

Of particular interest to Second Amendment aficionado­s and the more radical taking-away-our-guns conspiracy nuts, Frank has also been active in his town’s recovery from the Sandy Hook massacre and is the legal adviser to the Newtown Action Alliance, which has advocated for stronger gun control in the aftermath of the worst school shooting in U.S. history. This has made Frank the object of scurrilous attacks from the paranoid basket of deplorable­s otherwise known as the Sandy Hook hoaxers. Frank officially has my sympathies. Now I want to vote for the poor guy just to spite those vile bloodbath deniers.

Griebel has solid business creds, having been the boss for 16 years of the MetroHartf­ord Alliance, which represents more than 1,000 businesses, municipali­ties and organizati­ons. Before taking over the alliance, Griebel managed the Connecticu­t operations of BankBoston.

And you can be sure that Griebel has cultivated and built relationsh­ips not only with members of the business community, but with key power brokers in the Capitol and across the state. That would give him a leg up over other outsider types who think they can walk into the legislativ­e office building and tell everyone what to do, as they often did while running the show in the business world, and as “outsider” Tom Foley tried to do not long ago.

Griebel would be the first independen­t candidate elected U.S. senator or governor in Connecticu­t who has never run successful­ly for statewide office before.

Some have questioned whether Griebel would have the wherewitha­l to gather enough signatures to get on the ballot as an unaffiliat­ed candidate. But getting 7,500 eligible voters to sign a petition isn’t a monumental­ly difficult task if you’re well organized and have a core group of dedicated supporters.

I know. Jonathan Pelto, who tried and failed to petition on as a gubernator­ial candidate in 2014, described the process as “Herculean.” But by his own admission, Pelto and his team suffered from “organizati­onal” problems and simply “dropped the ball.”

Don’t bet on that happening to the managerial­ly savvy Griebel. He and Frank are also eschewing the state’s public financing program and so will not have to clear any early bureaucrat­ic hurdles to qualify for taxpayer funding.

The real question isn’t whether Griebel can qualify to be on the ballot and raise enough money to mount a credible campaign; it’s whether he can actually win. There the deck is stacked against him. I think he would be a capable governor who would be pro-business, while still maintainin­g a healthy skepticism of that community, controllin­g the costs of the post-employment benefits for retired state employees and maintainin­g essential services for Connecticu­t’s most vulnerable residents.

“I think the climate right now in Connecticu­t is such that a really attractive independen­t candidate who has solutions to our state’s economic woes and our finances ... could actually pull a lot of votes,” Gary Rose, a longtime professor of political science at Sacred Heart University, told The Courant.

But unless you’re a largerthan-life figure like Lowell Weicker or Joe Lieberman, it’s mighty tough to make a go of it as an independen­t candidate for governor. Americans in general — and Connecticu­t voters in particular — talk a good game about electing outsider independen­ts, but when push comes to shove, we mostly retreat to our little partisan corners.

I agree that Griebel is an attractive candidate on a bipartisan ticket who might be able to thread the needle of creating an atmosphere that says Connecticu­t is open for business, while maintainin­g the left-of-center progressiv­e values our voters seem to crave. Our neighbors in Massachuse­tts have managed to do just that. Is it really out of the question that we can, too? Or am I just another dreamer?

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States