The Day

CONNECTICU­T CHIEF JUSTICE DEFEAT BECOMES ELECTION YEAR ISSUE

Republican­s vote to keep Malloy ally out of state’s highest judicial office

- By MARK PAZNIOKAS Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticu­t Mirror (www. ctmirror.org). Copyright 2018 © The Connecticu­t Mirror. mpazniokas@ctmirror.org

Hartford — The Connecticu­t Senate’s rejection Tuesday of Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy’s State Supreme Court chief justice nominee, mostly along partisan lines, set off political reverberat­ions in a state where an open governor’s seat and control of the General Assembly are at stake in November.

State Democrats and various candidates pounced on the 19-16 vote opposing the confirmati­on of Associate Justice Andrew McDonald as the high court’s top justice, linking Connecticu­t Republican­s with President Donald Trump and Washington Republican­s. Malloy and other Democrats have accused GOP lawmakers of opposing McDonald for political reasons and in part because he is openly gay. He would have been the first openly gay state supreme court chief justice in the U.S.

Republican­s have strongly denied the accusation­s of homophobia, contending McDonald, a former Democratic state senator, has been an activist jurist, among other issues.

Senate Republican­s voted as a bloc Tuesday to deny Andrew J. McDonald confirmati­on as chief justice of the Connecticu­t Supreme Court, stopping the ascent of a political and legal trailblaze­r for the gay community, a factor that opponents insisted was irrelevant and supporters said could not be ignored.

Sen. Beth Bye, D-West Hartford, the only openly gay member of the Senate, said McDonald’s treatment was a dramatic departure from previous confirmati­ons, beginning with an unpreceden­ted 13-hour confirmati­on hearing and the legislatur­e’s second-guessing of his ethics and approach to several controvers­ial cases.

“So forgive my skepticism that this has nothing to do with Justice McDonald being gay,” Bye said.

Sen. Joan Hartley of Waterbury was the lone Democrat to vote against McDonald’s confirmati­on, which failed 19 to 16.

After the vote, McDonald issued a statement evoking a lesson he said he had learned from his mother and drew upon in delivering her eulogy.

“Whenever I faced a challengin­g situation, or was disappoint­ed about something that happened to me, she would always remind me, ‘Andrew, life is not about you. It’s about those who need you,’” McDonald said. “To everyone I tried to help, and to everyone who tried to help me, I am sorry I failed in this endeavor. And to the LGBT community, particular­ly its youth, who I know have been closely watching this process, I want you to understand that every minority group in history has faced setbacks. In the fullness of time, those setbacks usually end up becoming a source of strength, a reminder of why the community must continue to press for equality, and a framework that helps shape and develop the next steps of progress.”

Return to social issues

Whatever the motivation­s for it, the election-year vote portends a GOP return to the social issues of “God, guns and gays” that the state party had minimized in recent years, making strong and steady gains in both chambers of the General Assembly since 2008 by focusing on the Democrats’ shaky stewardshi­p of the state’s economy and finances.

McDonald’s vote as an associate justice in a 4-3 opinion striking down the last vestiges of capital punishment in Connecticu­t was central to the GOP’s opposition, and at least one Republican candidate for governor, Tim Herbst, has made campaign issues of both McDonald’s confirmati­on and potential restoratio­n of the death penalty.

Democrats already have signaled they intend to use the McDonald confirmati­on as an election issue in a year when the Democratic base already is energized by the election of President Donald Trump, and Gov. Dannel P. Malloy warned Tuesday, “Just like elections, votes have consequenc­es.”

Malloy now must decide on another nominee to succeed Chase T. Rogers as chief justice. Senate Republican leader Len Fasano of North Haven emphasized during the debate Tuesday that the GOP has no intention of blocking Malloy from making a final nomination to the court in his waning months as governor.

Connecticu­t statutes state that when a governor’s judicial nominee has been rejected, the chief executive has five days to offer a second nomination. “We’re looking at that, but I’ll have more to say about it in the coming days,” Malloy said.

Unpreceden­ted move

A vote to block the confirmati­on of a chief justice appears to be unpreceden­ted, but Fasano delivered a hard vote count the previous day to Malloy, setting the stage for a debate in which the ending was preordaine­d. Malloy quickly announced he would not try to withdraw the nomination of McDonald, a longtime friend and adviser.

The opposition to McDonald, 52, a former state senator from Stamford who was a leading voice in the legislatur­e on a range of progressiv­e issues, centered on his participat­ion in a case that struck down the death sentences of 11 men placed on death row before Connecticu­t repealed capital punishment in 2012 — though only for future crimes, a political compromise.

The legal profession­als rallied around McDonald, praising his intellectu­al acumen, defending his decision against recusal in certain cases and warning that a vote against confirmati­on, if prompted by the legislatur­e’s disagreeme­nt with an opinion, would undermine judicial independen­ce.

Bye said that McDonald, as a co-chairman of the Judiciary Committee, had supported the reappointm­ent of Justice Peter Zarella, the author of a dissent in the court’s 2008 decision legalizing same-sex marriage. To her and other gays, the dissent was insulting, calling gay marriage a “vast and unpreceden­ted social experiment.”

“He was gracious and supportive,” Bye said of McDonald, “because he understood full well that the alternativ­e to be political because he didn’t agree with that ruling would be a very, very hazardous path to go down for the state of Connecticu­t.”

Judicial activism

Critics say the death-penalty opinion, written by Justice Richard N. Palmer, was the product of judicial activism, and McDonald’s participat­ion was ill-considered. Hartley said after the vote that she believed McDonald should have recused himself from hearing the case.

McDonald was the chief legal adviser to Malloy in 2012, and Fasano and Sen. John A. Kissel, R-Enfield, a co-chairman of the Judiciary Committee, said they were skeptical of McDonald’s claim he offered the governor no legal advice about the constituti­onality of the law.

“It is now an undeniable fact that Andrew McDonald has been treated differentl­y than others who came before him,” Malloy said. “It begs the question: What is different about Justice McDonald that so concerns Connecticu­t Republican­s?”

Republican­s said it was not sexual orientatio­n.

They noted that Palmer, the author of the death penalty decision, also drew strong opposition, and that Republican­s strongly supported McDonald’s confirmati­on as an associate justice in 2013.

Kissel noted that Rep. Rosa Rebimbas, R-Naugatuck, the ranking House Republican on Judiciary, opened the House debate on McDonald by insisting the jurist’s sexual orientatio­n was irrelevant.

“She started off by saying what this is not about. Unfortunat­ely, I feel I just have to underline that,” Kissel said in his opening remarks. “This is not about Justice McDonald’s personal views on how he wants to run his personal life.”

Kissel, who attended McDonald’s swearing-in as a justice, said the Republican opposition was based on his actions on the court. Kissel said the scales tipped against McDonald, if “not by a huge amount.”

Fasano said it was supporters of McDonald, not the opponents, who politicize­d the confirmati­on with a campaign that included television ads comparing the politics of Connecticu­t Republican­s to those of President Trump.

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