Logan to challenge Hayes in 5th District
Former Republican state Sen. George Logan announced Wednesday that he is running against incumbent U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes in the 5th District.
WATERBURY — Former Republican state Sen. George Logan announced Wednesday that he is running against incumbent U.S. Rep. Jahana Hayes in the 5th District — setting up potentially the most competitive congressional race in Connecticut in the 2022 cycle.
Logan, who unseated a longtime Democratic incumbent in the state Senate, is seen as a strong challenger to Hayes, a popular former public school teacher who has accumulated $1.2 million in a campaign war chest. Hayes won races for the seat in 2018 and 2020 by 12 points each time as Republicans fared poorly in Connecticut in the last two cycles under President Donald Trump.
“It’s time for someone different,” Logan told supporters outside Noujaim Tool Co. in Waterbury,
out the process by which new buyers of guns and ammunition are fingerprinted and issued permits. Without permits, buyers cannot make purchases and licensed dealers cannot make sales.
The group sued the state last year ago after Gov. Ned Lamont allowed state and local police to stop fingerprinting applicants for gun permits during the coronavirus pandemic, a requirement for the issuance of permits. A federal judge said gun ownership is a fundamental right and ordered the police to resume fingerprinting. But the gun rights group, claiming that delays are continuing, wants the court to revisit the issue.
Brian Foley, a spokesman for the state Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection, said the agency agrees the permitting process has been beset by unacceptable delays, but is taking steps to increase efficiency. A week ago, he said the agency brought an automated computer permitting system online to replace a process that, for decades, involved registering permit applicants by hand with paper and pen.
The new automated system is being tested by a Hartford-area gun dealer, he said.
Foley said his department also has assigned additional employees to the permitting process and is taking other steps to speed up the process.
The gun group said whatever the state is doing is not enough.
President Holly Sullivan said police departments are again refusing to finger print applicants and that gun dealers are not getting through to the Department of Emergency Services and Public Protection on telephone calls they are required to make to obtain preauthorization for gun sales.
Sullivan urged the state to scrap what she called its unworkable permitting system and, as other states such as New York do, use the federal government’s system.
The gun rights group said in a statement that the state computer upgrade has caused the permitting system to collapse and licensed gun dealers, who rely on sales for income, are being effectively shut down.
“It is virtually impossible to purchase a firearm in Connecticut or for a federally licensed dealer to sell one,’ ” the group said in its statement.