The Norwalk Hour

‘It’s past time to move on from 2020’

State’s GOP doing its best to ignore Trump’s claims of stolen election

- By Mark Pazniokas

The first week of 2022 marks the start of a midterm election year and the anniversar­y of the stunning assault on the U.S. Capitol by protesters egged on by Donald J. Trump’s demonstrab­ly false claim that the election was stolen.

Trump’s insistence the election was rigged and his animus to Republican­s who say otherwise is a distractio­n that GOP candidates in Connecticu­t say they are intent on ignoring, while Democrats promise to make that impossible.

With polling consistent­ly showing at least two-thirds of Republican voters saying Biden did not win, GOP officials who merely acknowledg­e reality do so at the risk of antagonizi­ng significan­t elements of their base.

But Connecticu­t Republican­s largely are avoiding equivocati­ng or expressing doubts about Biden’s win, reasoning that to do only would keep Trump as an unwelcome wingman in 2022.

Trump may be on the ballot in 2024, but the Connecticu­t Republican state chair, Ben Proto, said his advice to candidates is to acknowledg­e Trump’s defeat in 2020 rather than engage in a fight that undercuts GOP campaigns in 2022.

“If we want to change things in Connecticu­t, if we want to take us out of the bottom of every important category that judges a state and get us back on track, then we need to change the people who are making the decisions in 2022,” Proto said. “Twenty-twenty-four will come around soon enough. But our job is to deal with 2022.”

Bob Stefanowsk­i, the 2018 gubernator­ial nominee and a likely candidate this year, dodged questions about Trump’s claims a year ago, the day before rioters tried to stop Vice President Mike Pence from certifying the results. On Wednesday, he answered a question about Biden’s legitimacy without equivocati­on.

“Joe Biden won the election, and it’s past time to move on from 2020 and focus on CT residents trying to figure out how they are going to keep the lights on, gas up their car, get a simple COVID test without waiting in line for hours,” Stefanowsk­i said in a text message.

A rival for the nomination, former House Republican Leader Themis Klarides, offered the same opinion today as she did a year ago: She had no objection to Trump pursuing every legal avenue to confirm the accuracy of the vote prior to certificat­ion but not his continuing efforts to mislead Americans about the results.

“He had a constituti­onal right to those challenges, and not one of them changed the results,” Klarides said. “It’s time to move

on. I feel the same way as I felt last year.”

Even Republican­s who insist voter fraud is a significan­t issue in American elections, including Connecticu­t’s, say it did not rise to a level capable of de-legitimizi­ng Biden’s solid popular vote victory of 81 million to 74 million.

Dominic Rapini, a Republican candidate for secretary of the state, has the view that Connecticu­t is not nearly stringent enough in investigat­ing election fraud, but he does not share Trump’s belief that the presidenti­al election was stolen.

“Joe Biden is a constituti­onally elected president of the United States. I just think that’s important for people to understand,” Rapini said. “I know there’s people in Connecticu­t that don’t want to hear that, and I understand that.”

State Sen. Rob Sampson of Wolcott says small-scale voter fraud — such as the harvesting of absentee ballots —is a problem that deserves bipartisan attention, but he does not support Trump’s claim that Biden is illegitima­te.

“I try to tell people who are on the extreme Trump bandwagon, who believe every word about the supposed election fraud that happened nationally and the President being robbed and so on, is that it doesn’t matter,” Sampson said. “Even if it were true, there’s no one who’s going to actually reverse that election.”

Sampson said the belief that Trump somehow can be restored to the White House without winning an election is more outlandish than the belief that the election can be proven to be rigged, as Mike Lindell of MyPillow claims in a self-funded documentar­y. Lindell said votes were stolen by hacking, even though voting machines are not connected to the web, and the digital voting machines used in most states produce paper ballots that can be hand-counted in audits and recounts.

“There’s no miracle. Michael Lindell the pillow guy is not going to show up one day with a smoking gun and announce to the world, ‘Look what happened!’ And suddenly we’re going to install Trump,” Sampson said. “That’s not going to happen. That’s just an absurdity.”

Elsewhere, Republican­s have frozen, dissembled or expressed uncertaint­y about 2020.

During a debate in Minnesota last month, Hugh Hewitt, the prominent conservati­ve radio host and writer, asked five Republican candidates for governor, “In your opinion, did President Biden win a constituti­onal majority of the Electoral College? If yes, how definitive is your conclusion, and if no, could you please explain which states you think are in dispute.”

“I can’t know what I don’t know, and I think we have to take that attitude towards 2020,” said Scott Jensen, a family doctor and former state senator.

No one gave Hewitt an unqualifie­d “yes,” though two acknowledg­ed the Electoral College gave Biden sufficient votes to win.

After the debate, Hewitt tweeted, “It is an important question and needs to be framed, I think, as I did. I expect it will be often asked and answered (or not) of many candidates in the year ahead.”

Connecticu­t House Speaker Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin, and other Democrats said in a news conference Thursday they will press Republican­s to say whether they stand with Trump and his continued efforts to perpetuate “the Big Lie.”

“So for anybody who is running for the House of Representa­tives, we will ask you that question publicly, [on] social media, many, many times,” Ritter said. “If you’re going to be part of the House of Representa­tives, is that who you support, and what do you think about what happened on that day, and are those the values that we should be teaching our citizens and our children?”

Bronin said Republican leaders have a responsibi­lity to help restore faith in free and open elections.

“When two-thirds of Republican­s nationwide say that they believe the ‘big lie’ about the 2020 elections, the only people who can change that, the only people who can protect our democracy today, are the leaders of that party,” Bronin said.

U.S. Rep. Jim Himes, D-4th District, among the last members of Congress evacuated from the House chamber on Jan. 6, said in an interview the unwillingn­ess of more Republican­s to acknowledg­e Biden’s victory and the belief of so many GOP voters that Trump was cheated is more alarming than the riot.

“Viking-horn guy with spear was not going to be the way our democracy ends,” Himes said. “But two-thirds of the adherents of a major political party, believing a lie for which there is not a shred of evidence, is the sign of a deeply, deeply sick democracy.”

 ?? Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org ?? Joey Yuchniuk, 10, shows four fingers to support reelection of President Trump, wearing a Trump costume mask at a rally in October in Montville.
Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org Joey Yuchniuk, 10, shows four fingers to support reelection of President Trump, wearing a Trump costume mask at a rally in October in Montville.

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