The Day

More absentee ballots mean more corruption

- By CHris Powell

Judging by voter participat­ion in Connecticu­t’s most recent municipal elections, Hartford may be the most demoralize­d place in the state.

The Hearst Connecticu­t newspapers report that only 14% of Hartford residents who are registered to vote did so in last year’s municipal election, when the city had the lowest voter participat­ion among all Connecticu­t municipali­ties. The city’s voter participat­ion rate is actually far worse than reported, since, as with all other municipali­ties, many eligible residents don’t even register to vote.

What is the City Council’s idea for curing this civic demoraliza­tion? It’s to diminish election security by mailing absentee ballot applicatio­ns for future elections to all residents on the voter rolls.

Of course absentee ballots have been at the center of the recent election corruption scandals in Bridgeport, where absentee ballot applicatio­ns have been pressed on people who did not apply for them and completed absentee ballots have been stuffed by political operatives into unsecured ballot deposit boxes.

Absentee ballots are a necessity of democracy but for election security their use should be minimized, not increased. For the more a voter is separated from the in-person casting of his vote, the more potential there will be for corruption. Requests for absentee ballots should be scrutinize­d for validation as much as the casting of completed ballots in person should be.

The Republican minority in the General Assembly is serious about this issue. The Democratic majority is not.

The Republican­s propose to outlaw the mailing of unsolicite­d absentee ballot applicatio­ns, to require people voting by absentee ballot to include a copy of an identifica­tion document bearing a photo, to require municipali­ties to provide voters with photo identifica­tion without charge, the cost to be reimbursed by state government; to require municipali­ties to update and audit their voter rolls regularly, and to suspend use of absentee ballot deposit boxes, since the U.S. mail can do the job more securely.

Democrats in Connecticu­t oppose requiring voters to present photo identifica­tion. The Democrats also support nullificat­ion of federal immigratio­n law. This may not be a coincidenc­e.

Pleading poverty

Should poor people have to obey the law in Connecticu­t? Legislatio­n approved by the General Assembly’s Judiciary Committee suggests that poverty should confer exemption from the law.

The legislatio­n, sponsored by four Democratic state representa­tives, would forbid the suspension of driver’s licenses for people who have failed to appear in court as ordered or who have failed to pay fines. Suspension of the driver’s licenses of people who ignore court orders and judgments has been an incentive for obeying the law.

The rationale of the legislatio­n is that poor people are less able to take time off from work to attend court and less able to pay fines, and of course they are. But if poverty is to excuse people from respect the law and the courts, why should they obey any law at all?

Connecticu­t’s courts already carry hundreds of cases of failure to appear. If the Judiciary Committee’s legislatio­n is enacted, the state is sure to experience much more contempt for law and an ever-growing inventory of “failure to appears” — and somehow the Democrats will call it justice.

Dillon improved Bradley

In recent years Connecticu­t has put many millions of dollars into Bradley Internatio­nal Airport. Though the correlatio­n between spending and improvemen­t in state government is usually weak, the airport has improved much since the Connecticu­t Airport Authority was created to operate it and the other state-owned airports in 2013.

For the 11 years since then Kevin A. Dillon has been the authority’s executive director, overseeing a great expansion of service at Bradley — more internatio­nal and nonstop flights, more airlines, better facilities and more passengers, though the passenger total from the year prior to the virus epidemic has not quite been surpassed yet.

Bradley makes a huge contributi­on to Connecticu­t’s economy, its business environmen­t and quality of life, for which Dillon must be credited. He plans to retire early next year and before he leaves the authority should name something after him.

Chris Powell has written about Connecticu­t government and politics for many years. He can be reached at CPowell@ cox.net.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States