The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Gender gap has role in 2018 election campaign

- By Mark Pazniokas

Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i and Democrat Ned Lamont are waging an asymmetric­al fight for the votes of women in Connecticu­t’s race for governor, one in which Republican­s are trying to keep voters tightly focused on the state economy and Democrats are making broader appeals over state and national issues.

Female voters, who are more numerous and tend to turn out at higher rates than men, are a prized demographi­c in every election cycle, but potentiall­y more so at a time when Washington is riven over the confirmati­on of Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh, a conservati­ve seen as hostile to abortion rights and accused of several long-ago sexual assaults.

Buoyed by a new Quinnipiac University poll that shows him with a huge advantage among women, Lamont and his running mate, Susan Bysiewicz, held a news conference Wednesday to promote what they called “a strategic agenda to empower, support and provide equal opportunit­y to woman in every facet of their lives.”

Lamont and Bysiewicz reiterated their support for a paid family and medical leave program that stalled in the General Assembly, a $15 minimum wage and greater access to child care. They also called for preserving funding for sexual assault and domestic violence services and extending the criminal statute of limitation­s for sexual assaults.

“We’ve got to make sure that businesses and government accommodat­e the changing work place and make sure it’s easier for women to work and also to take care of things at home, the same thing for the fathers,” Lamont said during the event, which took place at an informatio­n technology company in Glastonbur­y.

He and Bysiewicz, who privately toured a domestic violence shelter earlier Wednesday, were joined by Nancy Tyler, a domestic violence survivor who now serves on the board of the Connecticu­t Coalition Against Domestic Violence. Tyler said that many politician­s are ignorant about the realities and consequenc­es of domestic violence and sexual assault.

“Having been through it, I know a lot of women don’t feel like they are being heard, and that has to change,” Tyler said. “Women need government officials to hear them, to recognize and value their contributi­ons. Right now in Washington, we don’t see that support. We can’t let that happen here in Connecticu­t.”

On Tuesday night, Stefanowsk­i attended a more casual event held by Connecticu­t Women for Change, a coalition organized late in the campaign season to build support among women for Stefanowsk­i, or at least to discourage defections from the GOP over the Kavanaugh nomination and his potential influence on abortion rights.

Over cocktails at Lenny and Joe’s Fish Tale, a restaurant on Long Wharf in New Haven, the Kavanaugh confirmati­on didn’t seem to come up.

“It’s not part of the conversati­on,” said Leora Levy, a Republican National Committee member and organizer of the coalition. “It has no part in the conversati­on, and it is only the people who want to distract, who have no message, no positive message of their own, who are trying to make it a part of the conversati­on. We are laser-focused on fixing Connecticu­t, period.”

Her message to any woman who leaves the GOP over Kavanaugh is simple: “I’m telling them they have made a mistake. Kavanaugh doesn’t affect their lives. Kavanaugh, like every person, whether male or female, is entitled to the presumptio­n of innocence.”

Stefanowsk­i, who also regularly pronounces his campaign as being “laserfocus­ed” on financial issues, declined to say during a recent debate, held before the confirmati­on, whether he believed Kavanaugh deserved a place on the court.

Levy called Tuesday’s cocktail party an exercise in coalition-building and friend-making. Attendees were welcomed with a soft pitch for contributi­ons, either financial or as a campaign volunteer.

Sarah O’Connor, of Norwalk, who leads the College Republican­s at Southern Connecticu­t State University in New Haven, said the Kavanaugh confirmati­on hearings showed how men are vulnerable to uncorrobor­ated allegation­s of sexual assault. She said she thought of her brother.

“I’m scared for him,” she said.

Noting that her parents are small-business owners, her larger concerns for Connecticu­t revolved on the economic issues that are central to Stefanowsk­i’s campaign.

Other women at the party said they, too, were most concerned about the economy and the state’s chronic budget woes. “I do believe it’s a spending problem. It’s not a revenue problem,” said Jennifer Verraneaul­t of Branford.

Stefanowsk­i mingled and briefly addressed the audience, which included old friends from North Haven, where he and his wife, Amy, another leader of the coalition, both grew up. Stefanowsk­i, whose most recent private-sector job was chief executive officer of DFC Global, which offers payday loans and other alternativ­e financial services, told them he always has included women on his leadership teams.

“I have always valued diversity,” Stefanowsk­i said. “Every one of my management teams over the years, I’ve had 50 percent diversity. I do that for a reason. I want to surround myself with people who have different opinions.”

 ?? Jessica Hill / Associated Press ?? Republican Party candidate Bob Stefanowsk­i, left, shakes hands with Democratic Party candidate Ned Lamont at the end of a gubernator­ial debate at the University of Connecticu­t in Storrs on Sept. 26.
Jessica Hill / Associated Press Republican Party candidate Bob Stefanowsk­i, left, shakes hands with Democratic Party candidate Ned Lamont at the end of a gubernator­ial debate at the University of Connecticu­t in Storrs on Sept. 26.

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