The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Some state Republican­s wish Trump didn’t demand suburban voter attention

- By Mark Pazniokas CTMIRROR.ORG

RIDGEFIELD — There is no Trump sign in the window at the Republican headquarte­rs here. It’s a storefront across from the Ace hardware store and Deborah Anne’s Sweet Shoppe, a quaint stretch of Main Street with brisk foot traffic. The absent sign is, well, a sign of the times.

“If I put Trump signs up in the window, it’s a trigger for some people. We don’t want that,” said Bob Hebert, the GOP nominee to succeed Rep. John H. Frey,

R-Ridgefield, who is retiring after 22 years. “We as a party support our president. We want him to win, but on the other hand ...”

It goes without saying: The election of Donald Trump as the 45th president of the United States has been trouble for Republican­s in places like Ridgefield, one of the affluent Fairfield County suburbs where GOP victories in state and federal races once were assured. No longer.

The contest to succeed Frey in the state’s 111th House District, wholly

within the boundaries of Ridgefield, is one of several in Connecticu­t testing the opportunit­y Trump has afforded Democrats — and the complicati­ons that the GOP’s national brand presents for Republican­s in New England.

The Republican and Democratic nominees here are archetypes of 2020 politics: Hebert is running despite the president; the Democrat, Aimee Berger-Girvalo, is running because of him, happy to talk about the dangers Trump’s pending nominee for the Supreme Court poses to reproducti­ve rights in Connecticu­t.

On Sunday afternoon, as Hebert sat inside the campaign headquarte­rs talking about the unsettled and often angry vibe of election season, he smiled at a 30-something woman who briefly lingered on the sunny sidewalk by the open door and raised her hand, as if to wave. But she didn’t wave.

“Oh,” Hebert said, “the finger.” It’s been that kind of a year. New in 2020 at the Republican headquarte­rs is a video and audio recording system. A placard in a standing Lucite frame instructs volunteers: “If you get someone acting inappropri­ately, please let them have their rant, smile and point out our cameras and thank them for the content.”

The anger goes both ways. Democrats opted against a physical headquarte­rs due to the COVID-19 pandemic, a recognitio­n that volunteers tend to be young and potential vectors of the coronaviru­s or old and vulnerable to it. Instead, they operate virtually during the week and staff a pop-up headquarte­rs on weekends under a canopy outside Town Hall.

On Saturday, Trump supporters screamed at Democrats, said one of the volunteers, Sylvia Steinert. One man parked his Jeep behind the Democratic tent and yelled, “Fascists!”

Berger-Girvalo said she has been abused and subjected to wild rumors on social media. She has largely chosen to ignore them, though some friends took up the fight on Twitter and Facebook — only to withdraw.

“There were people who started to speak out, who won’t anymore,” Berger-Girvalo said Sunday as she campaigned door-to-door on winding, tree-lined roads lined with stone walls and shade trees, but no sidewalks. “They have just been so seriously bullied online in all forms of social media.”

At the Republican headquarte­rs, a masked mother accompanie­d by a teenaged boy in a Mets sweatshirt told Hebert she was nervous about putting up lawn signs, fearing a post-election “retributio­n.” She didn’t say what form that might take.

The mother described herself as skeptical about the safety of childhood vaccines and quizzed Hebert on his thoughts. He replied he believes in their safety and efficacy, but supports maintainin­g the current religious exemption, which allows parents to withhold them.

The woman left with signs for Hebert, the Republican state Senate nominee, Kim Healey, and Trump. While there were no Trump signs in the window, the GOP had a limited supply provided on consignmen­t by the Trump

campaign. They were on sale for $20.20. Hebert’s are free.

Ridgefield, a community of 25,000, is one of the suburbs Trump wants voters to believe need his protection. To an audience in Wisconsin, the president recently railed against Democrats who would “eliminate singlefami­ly zoning, bringing who knows into your suburbs, so your communitie­s will be unsafe and your housing values will go down.”

Republican­s, Hebert included, campaigned against the police accountabi­lity bill passed in special session this summer in response to the police killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, as well as a school regionaliz­ation proposal that quickly died two years ago.

Berger-Girvalo and Sen. Will Haskell, D-Westport, who now represents the district after unseating a Republican two years ago, have worked together to rebut GOP claims they are open to school regionaliz­ation and cutting funding for police.

Ridgefield is bordered on the west by bucolic New York sub

urbs, on the north by Danbury, and on the east and west by a crescent of suburban wealth in Redding, Weston, Wilton and New Canaan. The median price of 227 homes recently on sale in Ridgefield was $759,000. Its median household income was estimated in 2018 at nearly $160,000. Three quarters of the adult residents have at least a four-year college degree.

By the norms of a playbook that served Republican­s well, Hebert is a textbook candidate: the businessma­n who has lived in town for 39 years, coaching sports and volunteeri­ng in civic life, first as chair of the local housing authority and now as a member of the Board of Selectmen.

Hebert is 71, married with three adult children, one a pilot of C-130 transport planes for the Air National Guard. He is tall and trim with close-cropped white hair. He is a Vietnam veteran, a founder of a community bank in New Canaan.

Frey recruited him to run. No one needed to ask BergerGirv­alo.

Berger-Girvalo, 47, is the divorced mother of a high school freshman and a college sophomore. She amiably refers to her former husband as her “wuzband.” She grew up in New York, lived in Boston and has been in Ridgefield for 15 years.

Before COVID, she worked one-on-one with children on the autism spectrum as a therapist trained in applied behavior analysis, a practice that focuses on improving specific behaviors such as communicat­ion and social skills. The home therapy visits are about to resume.

Ridgefield has a long history of voting for Republican­s in presidenti­al races, interrupte­d by a refusal to support arch-conservati­ve Barry Goldwater in 1964 and a willingnes­s to give Barack Obama a try in 2008. Ridgefield was back in the fold in 2012, supporting Mitt Romney.

Trump was crushed here in 2016. He carried just 39.73 percent of the vote, even though registered Republican­s then outnumbere­d Democrats by nearly 1,000 voters — 6,266 to 5,286. It was a harbinger of things to come.

Some time earlier this year, Democrats became the majority, at least after the unaffiliat­ed. The Democratic voter registrati­on stood at 6,489 on Friday, while the GOP rolls fell to 5,473. Unaffiliat­ed voters are the biggest bloc, with 6,913.

Voters did not punish downballot Republican­s in 2016.

To the contrary, voters split their tickets and gave Republican­s stunning gains in state legislativ­e races, forcing an 18-18 tie in the Senate and leaving Democrats with their smallest House majority in three decades.

The punishment would come in 2018. A blue wave reached unexpected corners of Connecticu­t as 100,000 more voters turned out than is typical in mid-term elections. They did not come out to help Republican­s.

In Fairfield County, Democrats unseated three Republican state senators, including the one who represente­d Ridgefield for a decade. Republican House members lost seats in Greenwich and New Canaan.

In Ridgefield, Frey hung on, beating Berger-Girvalo, 52 percent to 48 percent. She was hoping for a rematch this year.

 ?? Mark Pazniokas / CTMirror.org ?? Bob Hebert, a Republican legislativ­e candidate in Ridgefield, talks to a voter outside GOP headquarte­rs on Main Street in Ridgefield.
Mark Pazniokas / CTMirror.org Bob Hebert, a Republican legislativ­e candidate in Ridgefield, talks to a voter outside GOP headquarte­rs on Main Street in Ridgefield.
 ?? Mark Pazniokas / CTMirror.org ?? Bob Hebert’s lawn signs portray suburbs as threatened by school regionaliz­ation and police defunding. The “thin blue line” flag supporting police is prominentl­y featured at his headquarte­rs.
Mark Pazniokas / CTMirror.org Bob Hebert’s lawn signs portray suburbs as threatened by school regionaliz­ation and police defunding. The “thin blue line” flag supporting police is prominentl­y featured at his headquarte­rs.

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