The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Candidates for gov play it safe in debate

- By Mark Pazniokas CTMIRROR.ORG

MASHANTUCK­ET — The final debate in Connecticu­t’s volatile race for governor starred Democrat Ned Lamont and Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i, two major-party candidates close in the polls and intent on avoiding mistakes in the campaign’s final week, plus a third-party candidate desperate to show he is not a spoiler, Oz Griebel.

Over a one-hour debate televised live Tuesday night on WTNH, Channel 8 from Foxwoods Resort Casino, the candidates treated questions as opportunit­ies to pivot toward practiced talking points, declining repeated invitation­s to share specifics about policies, including how they would close a $2 billion shortfall that awaits one of them on Jan. 9.

One unscripted moment came in an unexpected­ly sarcastic comment from Griebel after Stefanowsk­i indicated he was open to allowing early voting in Connecticu­t as a means to increase voter participat­ion in elections.

“I’m glad that Bob feels strongly about voting — given his track record,” Griebel said.

Stefanowsk­i, 56, a former corporate executive, entered politics last year after not voting for 16 years. He registered as a Democrat in October 2016, but cast no vote for Hillary Clinton, Donald Trump or anyone else that year. He registered as a Republican in July 2017.

An audience dominated by municipal officials attending the annual convention of the Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties laughed, then applauded.

Stefanowsk­i offered no retort.

Lamont, 64, a founder of a small cable-television company and former elected official in Greenwich, used the question to mention Trump, an energizing factor for Democrats. Lamont urged a strong voter turnout, saying that Trump has reminded the nation that elections have consequenc­es.

Stefanowsk­i, who trailed Lamont by just four percentage points in a Quinnipiac University poll released earlier Tuesday, said voters understand the gubernator­ial election will have consequenc­es for Connecticu­t, a point in his favor.

“I have a feeling people are going to come roaring back to the polls next week,” he said.

Griebel, 69, the former leader of the Metro-Hartford Alliance, is languishin­g with single-digit support in recent polls, with one showing him drawing support from Lamont.

Neither Lamont nor Stefanowsk­i would suggest after the debate that Griebel should withdraw. Asked how he would respond to anyone making that requisitio­n, Griebel replied succinctly: “Drop dead.”

The event was sponsored by CCM, the Hartford Courant and WTNH, with CCM’s leader, Joe DeLong, joining two journalist­s, Keith Kountz of WTNH and Daniela Altimari of The Courant, in posing questions. DeLong tried and failed to elicit specific policy positions from the candidates, other than a unified opposition to further unfunded mandates on cities and towns.

Central to Stefanowsk­i’s campaign is a promise to phase out the state’s income tax, the source of half the state’s revenue, over eight years. But he talked Tuesday night about increasing state spending for health, education and transporta­tion without saying how he would fund those investment­s, other than a promise to first grow the economy by tax cuts.

Griebel said he would use the state’s budget reserves and defer pension contributi­ons, two fiscally suspect approaches that he says are unavoidabl­e.

“This is a serious matter that doesn’t lend itself to poll-tested platitudes,” Griebel said.

Lamont reminded him that deferring teacher pension contributi­ons would violate covenants on bonds the state issued a decade ago to stabilize the pensions fund. He also objected to use of the budget reserves, saying it would simply delay dealing with the shortfall, not resolve it.

“I’m the one who’s going to solve this,” Lamont said.

A question about how to improve police relations with African-American communitie­s, an increasing­ly fraught issue, gave Stefanowsk­i a chance to say he was for tougher security at schools, while it was Lamont’s opportunit­y to mention the shooting deaths of 11 worshipers at a synagogue in Pittsburgh — and the NRA’s endorsemen­t of Stefanowsk­i.

Was there anything new Tuesday?

Lamont said he appreciate­d some of the softer questions, especially one that gave the candidates an opportunit­y to talk about their values and charitable works.

“I loved that question,” he told reporters after the debate. “I’ve had plenty of policy. You want me to talk about Bob’s tax plan? Shoot me. I think we had plenty of that.”

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