The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Blue wave may drown GOP in New England

- By Ana Radelat

Buffeted by political ill winds, New England’s Republican­s in Congress moved toward the brink of extinction in last week’s midterm elections, while Democrats made huge gains at all levels of state government offices.

Connecticu­t has not had a Republican representa­tive in Congress since 2009. Now it appears that all but one of the six New England states — Maine — will have all-blue congressio­nal delegation­s.

In Maine on Thursday, Jared Golden, a Marine Corps veteran and Democratic state lawmaker, was declared the winner against New England’s lone U.S. House Republican, Bruce Poliquin.

That leaves Sen. Susan Collins, of Maine, who was not up for re-election this year, as the only GOP lawmaker in Congress from New England, once a bastion of a special brand of pragmatic, Yankee Republican­ism.

After her support of Supreme Court Justice

Brett Kavanaugh, Collins is likely to face a strong Democratic challenger if she runs for re-election in two years.

Republican losses were not by any means limited to the federal level.

In Massachuse­tts, Democrats added to their supermajor­ity in the state Legislatur­e and can now override the veto of Republican Gov. Charlie Baker, who coasted to re-election on a strong economy and an anti-Trump message.

Vermont’s Republican Gov. Phil Scott also won re-election, but like Baker, now faces a Legislatur­e with more Democratic and Progressiv­e party members who can override his vetoes.

In Maine, Democrat Janet Mills captured the governor’s office from the GOP and will be the first woman in the state to hold that office. Democrats also made big gains in Maine’s state Legislatur­e.

In Rhode Island, Democratic Gov. Gina Raimondo won re-election and, like everywhere else in New England, Democrats gained seats in the general assembly.

The one place where Republican­s prevailed was New Hampshire, where GOP Gov. Chris Sununu succeeded in his re-election bid.

“But he is now a red dot in a sea of blue,” said Wayne Lesperance, a political science professor at New England College in Henniker, N.H.

New Hampshire was once considered a rockribbed Republican state. No more. In the midterm election, Democrats seized control of the state Legislatur­e from the GOP and also won control of the Executive Council, a governing body that’s a holdover from colonial times.

As far as keeping the governor’s office in Republican hands, Lesperance said, Sununu “ran basically

against the president and survived.”

President Donald Trump has posed a unique challenge to New England Republican­ism, known for its pragmatism and moderation, especially when it came to social issues, Lesperance said.

Even before Trump, the so-called Rockefelle­r Republican­s who once represente­d the region were becoming a dying breed because the national Republican Party moved to the right and moderates in both parties disappeare­d.

The Pew Research Center says the combined House delegation of the six New England states went from 15 Democrats and 10 Republican­s in 1973-74 to 20 Democrats and two Republican­s in 2011-12. What the GOP lost in New England it gained in the South, where the combined House delegation switched positions: from 91 Democrats and 42 Republican­s in 1973-74, to 107 Republican­s and 47 Democrats in 201112.

Gary Rose, the head of the political science department at Sacred Heart University, said the political realignmen­t of the South transforme­d the national Republican Party into the champion of social conservati­sm and the religious right, putting it at odds with New England Republican­s.

“A lot of them just bolted the party,” he said.

Trump, with his controvers­ies and bombastic demeanor, complicate­d what was already a difficult task of getting re-elected for the region’s party members.

The losses “were a continuati­on of a trend that began way before Donald Trump, but his presidency has increased the disconnect between New England Republican­s and the broader national Republican Party,” Lesperance said.

Unlike other New England GOP gubernator­ial candidates, Connecticu­t’s Bob Stefanowsk­i did not run against Trump. The Republican Governors

Associatio­n spent more than $5 million to support Stefanowsk­i in his race against Democrat Ned Lamont hoping the GOP could wrest that seat from Democrats because of the unpopulari­ty of outgoing Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.

But the same blue wave that washed over other parts of New England also swept across Connecticu­t last week, keeping the governor’s office and all statewide offices in Democratic hands and giving Democrats healthy majorities in the state House and Senate.

Former Rep. Chris Shays, the last Republican to serve in Connecticu­t’s congressio­nal delegation, said Stefanowsk­i’s loss could be attributed to several things.

He said Connecticu­t Republican­s have nominated wealthy individual­s to run for office in the last three gubernator­ial elections — Stefanowsk­i and Tom Foley — and left it up to them to finance and run their campaigns.

“There was no grassroots effort, there was no organizati­on,” said Shays, who was defeated by Rep. Jim Himes in 2008.

Meanwhile, Democratic voters began to organize the day after the president’s election, joining several groups in an anti-Trump movement the state Democratic party and its candidates could turn into an effective grassroots force

Shays, who rejected his party’s presidenti­al nominee and backed Hillary Clinton in 2016, also said Trump’s behavior posed a problem for Connecticu­t Republican­s

“I view people in New England as people with a lot of common sense,” he said. “New Englanders value honesty. Republican candidates who were silent or embraced Trump made a mistake.”

Rose also said the “Trump effect” affected New England races this year.

“If there was ever a race where there should have been change, it was this one,” Rose said of the Connecticu­t’s governor’s race.

But, he said, Democratic wins “tell a lot about the demographi­cs of the region and the animus people in New England, and maybe especially in Connecticu­t, have against Trump.”

Although Trump received nearly 41 percent of the vote in Connecticu­t in 2016, polls over the summer showed his favorabili­ty rating in the state was only about 30 percent.

Still, many GOP voters in Connecticu­t strongly support Trump. That’s likely one reason all Republican gubernator­ial candidates in August’s primary election graded the president’s performanc­e in office an “A.”

But, according to a count by the Connecticu­t Secretary of the State’s office last week, only 21 percent of Connecticu­t’s voters were registered Republican­s. About 38 percent were registered Democrats and about 40 percent were unaffiliat­ed.

To win, a GOP candidate running for statewide office must appeal to unaffiliat­ed voters, and even some Democrats. Only a small number of Republican voters picked the winner in the GOP primary and Stefanowsk­i failed to win enough support outside his party.

Despite its electoral losses this year, Murphy said the Republican Party in Connecticu­t could regain its strength.

“If it decouples themselves from Trump, it can come back,” he said.

Murphy also said the GOP gubernator­ial primary was a “nightmare” for Republican­s because only the party faithful could vote in that contest — and primary voters tend to be the most conservati­ve.

He suggested opening up Connecticu­t’s primaries “at least to unaffiliat­ed voters” to allow more moderate GOP candidates to emerge.

The Connecticu­t Republican Party did not respond to a request for comment for this article.

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i failed to win the race for Connecticu­t governor against Democrat Ned Lamont.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Republican Bob Stefanowsk­i failed to win the race for Connecticu­t governor against Democrat Ned Lamont.

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