The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Governor Malloy exits the political arena

- Don Pesci Columnist Don Pesci is a writer who lives in Vernon. E-mail him at donpesci@att.net.

Malloy Thursday announced he would be passing the baton to some other deserving Democrat, so he hopes.

In 20 months, reporters in the state will be referring to “former Governor Dannel Malloy.”

On Thursday, Mr. Malloy announced he would be passing the gubernator­ial baton to some other deserving Democrat, so he hopes. In the last few years, Republican­s have made inroads into Connecticu­t’s one-party state. The State Senate is now evenly split between the two parties, and Democratic hegemony in the General Assembly has had one of its wings clipped.

Remorse and melancholy usually hang over announceme­nts of this kind like winding shrouds, after which the usual crowd begins to calculate the pluses and minuses of the leave-taking: The King is dead, long live the King; or, as Louie Armstrong use to sing, “Life goes on without ya.”

Mr. Malloy, it is said, was choked with emotion “several times in a 35-minute press conference.”

Though now a lame duck governor whose political clout will therefore be much diminished, Mr. Malloy vowed to devote his remaining time in office “to continue implementi­ng my administra­tion’s vision for a more sustainabl­e and vibrant Connecticu­t economy.” This will be difficult for him now that he has announced he will remove his hand from the governing tiller.

All the underlying forces — some of which are demons of good government — will be set loose. Malloy’s bargaining power with state unions will be diminished; the Democratic Party machine will be left to its own devises; the party fissure between Old Guard Democratic moderates and ambitious progressiv­es will widen; and real political power within the Democratic Party will pass, until the gubernator­ial election is concluded, from a lame duck governor to Democratic leaders in the General Assembly, one of which, Speaker of the House Joe Aresimowic­z, is employed by a union.

Addressing a room packed with staffers, legislator­s and lobbyists, Mr. Malloy promised, “I will focus all my attention and energy. I will use all of my political capital from now through the end of 2018 to continue implementi­ng my administra­tion’s vision… I’ve been doing that for a while. I know that Connecticu­t must continue to change and grow and strive for a more perfect tomorrow — that we must continue to focus on the longgame.”

It is not through want of energy in the executive that Connecticu­t is blowing bubbles from beneath the waves. During his first term in office, Mr. Malloy energetica­lly imposed upon his state the largest tax increase in its history, followed by the second largest tax increase in state history, followed by a stunning realizatio­n: while state revenue was increasing by leaps, deficits were increasing by bounds.

Eventually, the realizatio­n slowly made its way past Ben Barnes, the state’s number cruncher, to Mr. Malloy’s ears. The state, Mr. Barnes advised, must get used to deficits for some time to come.

Why so? Because state deficit obligation­s are caused by spending increases, excessive borrowing to avoid tax increases, the pilfering over the years of dedicated funds to off-set red ink in state budgets and — no small matter — uncontroll­ed increases in untouchabl­e “fixed costs.”

Over the years, the cowardly General Assembly had simply surrendere­d its fiduciary responsibi­lities by moving discretion­ary spending into the “fixed cost” pot.

Connecticu­t’s constituti­onal cap on spending, dangled before the General Assembly during the administra­tion of then Governor Lowell Weicker to gain legislativ­e votes for an income tax, Attorney General George Jepsen found, belatedly, about a quarter century after the income tax had passed, was inoperativ­e and unconstitu­tional.

In the process of supplying new definition­s that would make the cap constituti­onal, Democrats hit on a brilliant idea: why not move large chunks of spending outside the new cap and thereby relieve the pressure on the Democrat dominated General Assembly to cap spending?

Progressiv­es in Connecticu­t, never weary of finding new ways of drawing water from stones, have proposed:

1) re-institutin­g tolls, which cannot be placed, according to federal law, only on the borders of a state;

2) putting the progressiv­e tax bite on hedge funds, Connecticu­t’s last undamaged source of tax revenue; and

3) institutin­g a tax in destitute cities such as Hartford that would be imposed on employees who travel across city lines to work.

Such are the visions — nightmares some will call them — of the Malloy-Aresimowic­z-President Pro Tempore Martin Looney administra­tion.

When Connecticu­t’s last Republican governor, Jodi Rell, threw in the gubernator­ial towel, she moved her prime residence to Florida, whose tax bite is endurable. Betting is on that soon-tobe former Gov. Dannel Malloy will move, upon his retirement, to a less punishing state than progressiv­e Connecticu­t.

Connecticu­t governors, more fleet footed than other residents who do not have wings on their feet, have the luxury of moving away from their visions.

Over the years, the cowardly General Assembly had simply surrendere­d its fiduciary responsibi­lities by moving discretion­ary spending into the “fixed cost” pot.

 ?? REGISTER CITIZEN FILE PHOTO ?? Gov. Dannel P. Malloy
REGISTER CITIZEN FILE PHOTO Gov. Dannel P. Malloy
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States