Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Murphy hits a patch of rough road

- By Emilie Munson

Gary Pavano pulled over his car when he saw Sen. Chris Murphy walking down a Berlin street Saturday morning.

Pavano, an air-conditione­r repair man, wanted to talk to his senator about his high-deductible insurance plan. He was worried about how the growing U.S. deficit would affect his grandchild­ren.

And Pavano certainly did not want to see American dollars spent on housing illegal immigrants in detention facilities — he supported migrant children being separated from their parents if it would stop the flow of illegal immigratio­n, he said.

His voice grew frustrated as he cried to Murphy, “I email you! Why didn’t you answer? I email you all the time. I get a boiler-plate answer!”

Murphy, wearing a green “Defender of the Universe” T-shirt, was polite.

“We get 5,000 letters every week, and unfortunat­ely I don’t have the money to respond to every person individual­ly,” he said — and tried to turn the conversati­on back to health care.

Scenes like this one unfolded repeatedly as Murphy, a Democrat who is seeking re-election in 2018, trekked from New Britain to Meriden Saturday as part of his third annual walk across the state.

There were plenty of warm moments Saturday. Avery’s Beverage manager Rob Metz welcomed Murphy to his store with custom-labeled soda, featuring Murphy’s face and an image of his footprints across Connecticu­t. And there was hearty applause for the senator at the Meriden Senior Center, where he held a town hall-style meeting.

But many constituen­ts — some of whom said they liked Murphy and others who made it clear they did not — expressed frustratio­n. A few said they felt ignored by the party and by the junior senator who had hit the streets to stay, in his words, “radically in touch with the people I represent.”

Health care, immigratio­n

At the town hall, Don Geckle, of Southingto­n, said he thought Murphy was a good senator, but pushed him and the Democrats for more informatio­n about inflation and unemployme­nt. He worried that people didn’t really know how bad the deficits were — and that maybe Democrats weren’t doing enough about it.

Another woman shook her head when Murphy told her there was little he could do about her rising prescripti­on drug costs and health insurance deductible­s if Democrats didn’t control Congress.

Sai Surapaneni, whose family came to Connecticu­t from India on H1B work visas, went to the microphone to beg Murphy to pay more attention to immigrants who came to the U.S. legally. Surapaneni’s college-age nieces and nephews were going to age out of their visa-sponsored immigratio­n status, and they were still waiting and waiting for green cards, he said.

“All this talk is of the people who are coming here without legal documents,” Surapaneni’s said. “Yourself, the Connecticu­t senior senator (Richard Blumenthal) and the delegation are not really talking or doing anything about the people who came here legally.”

Murphy assured Surapaneni that not everything he did was reflected in the news, and in fact, H1B visas were something Democrats had been trying to work on since 2013.

Murphy, who identifies as a “progressiv­e Democrat,” spent a lot of time explaining his positions on immigratio­n in Berlin, where 53 percent of residents backed President Donald Trump in the 2016 election.

He does not support abolishing U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t — also known as ICE — he said. He voted for a 2013 bill that would essentiall­y “militarize” the border with Mexico. He wants a path to citizenshi­p for undocument­ed immigrants who are paying taxes and have not committed crimes.

But in Berlin, Murphy had to fight hard against the reputation that Democrats want “open borders.”

“I can’t support you anymore,” said John O’Brien, an unaffiliat­ed voter from Berlin with a Trump sticker on his car. O’Brien was a former union Democrat, he said, but abandoned the party because “I’m not getting Social Security increases because we are supporting people like them,” referring to undocument­ed immigrants.

Murphy reminding him that waves of immigrants throughout history — like O’Brien’s ancestors — sought to come to this country. He was composed and firm.

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