The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Campaigns launch advertisin­g airwars

- By Mark Pazniokas

For $5,500, a 30-second spot promoting Democratic gubernator­ial candidate Ned Lamont is set to air on “60 Minutes” on Sunday, part of a weekly television buy of more than $500,000 that dwarfs the $150,000 in time purchased by his Republican opponent, Bob Stefanowsk­i.

But Stefanowsk­i has help: Change PAC, a super PAC funded by the Republican Governors Associatio­n, is spending more than $300,000 to air ads attacking Lamont over the next seven days, keeping the air wars a roughly even match.

Change PAC reported Tuesday the receipt of another $1 million in the past two weeks from the RGA, whose spending on the Connecticu­t race now has topped $2 million. Based on ad time reserved by Change PAC, the RGA intends to spend about $3 million by Election Day.

The independen­t expenditur­es are a significan­t boost to Stefanowsk­i, though far smaller than the $5.5 million investment the RGA made four years ago in an unsuccessf­ul effort to unseat Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, a Democrat not seeking re-election this year.

Lamont, a wealthy selffunder, is running with little support from the Democratic Governors Associatio­n this year. The DGA opened a super PAC in Connecticu­t called Our Connecticu­t PAC, but it has only contribute­d $125,000, some of which has been used for research.

In 2014, the DGA contribute­d about $4 million to a state affiliate, Connecticu­t Forward, which also was the recipient of about $2 million in union contributi­ons.

The RGA and DGA can make unlimited expenditur­es to influence a gubernator­ial race, so long as they do not coordinate their activities with the campaigns of Stefanowsk­i and Lamont.

Overall, the 2018 race for governor of Connecticu­t is on pace to attract far less outside spending than Malloy’s rematch with Republican Tom Foley in 2014. Independen­t expenditur­es that year topped $18 million, with the spending roughly even — $9.3 million to help Malloy and $8.9 million to assist Foley.

In 2014, both major-party nominees were participan­ts in the state’s voluntary program of public financing, which provided each candidate $6.5 million for the general election campaign.

Neither Lamont nor Stefanowsk­i is participat­ing in public financing this year. Their latest campaign finance reports, which will show their spending and contributi­ons through Sept. 30, must be filed by midnight Wednesday.

Stefanowsk­i says his report will show he’s raised $2 million since winning the GOP primary on Aug. 14. The number includes a $250,000 check he wrote to his own campaign.

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