The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Stefanowsk­i attacked on vaccinatio­n comments

Lamont calls opponent ‘grossly irresponsi­ble’

- By Mackenzie Rigg

Surrounded by medical providers and state legislator­s, Democrat Ned Lamont on Wednesday attacked Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i for comments he made about childhood vaccinatio­ns during a campaign event this summer. NBC Connecticu­t obtained the video of Stefanowsk­i from a source working for Democratic campaigns in Connecticu­t. The video is two minutes long, and does not include what is said before or after the two-minute portion on immunizati­on policy, according to the NBC Connecticu­t report.

In the grainy video, Stefanowsk­i was asked whether he thinks the state or local boards of education should dictate vaccinatio­ns.

Stefanowsk­i responded by saying, “I think it depends on the vaccinatio­n . ... I mean, you know, we shouldn’t be dumping a lot of drugs into kids for no reason.”

He also says in the video, “I don’t think we should be forcing people to inject a ton of chemicals into their kids, but I would want to see more about it.”

Lamont, at a news conference in Hartford on Wednesday, blasted Stefanowsk­i for those comments.

“One of your jobs as a governor is to think about the public health and make sure that your kids are safe when they go to school,” he said. “It’s just grossly irresponsi­ble to dismiss that.”

Connecticu­t law requires children to receive vaccinatio­ns before they can enroll in public school. Requiremen­ts also exist for children attending day care and youth camps, and college students.

Stefanowsk­i spokesman Kendall Marr told NBC Connecticu­t in a statement earlier this week: “Bob’s position here is in line with the law. While he believes that the best practice is to vaccinate your children, he does not believe that the government should be able to legally force you to do so.”

On Wednesday, Marr said in a statement that Stefanowsk­i’s comments were taken out of context and that the GOP nominee for governor “fully supports current policy on vaccines. He is not seeking any changes to those requiremen­ts.”

Marr said Stefanowsk­i’s comments came after an attendee claimed children were being required to undergo around 50 vaccines to attend school, which Marr said is much higher than what is required by the state and what is recommende­d by federal agencies and medical organizati­ons.

“At no point did he say we shouldn’t be giving the necessary vaccinatio­ns required by state law and recommende­d by the experts,” Marr said. “In fact, he refused to commit to a bill loosening vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts in the video. Bob believes that immunizati­ons are an important part of protecting public health.”

According to NBC Connecticu­t, Stefanowsk­i also said on the video that his three daughters were vaccinated.

The NBC story caught the attention of national media outlets on Tuesday, resulting in what was probably unwelcome attention for the Stefanowsk­i campaign.

At the Wednesday news conference, Lamont’s running mate, Susan Bysiewicz, said Stefanowsk­i’s remarks are “disqualify­ing.”

“They make it very clear that he and Joe Markley are not prepared to lead and govern,” she said. “If you’re not willing to listen to the medical community, to scientific evidence and you only pander to an extremist radical few people in our state, it means you’re not ready to lead.”

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