The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Legislatur­e has co-equal responsibi­lity

- By state Rep. Vincent Candelora State Rep. Vincent Candelora of North Branford is the House Republican Leader.

Gov. Ned Lamont on Jan. 26 extended his authority to unilateral­ly run the state of Connecticu­t, enacting sweeping executive orders through April 20. One day earlier, Republican­s offered to consider this request with some caveats. Despite what you may have heard, none of those caveats included mask orders or a refusal to extend his powers.

Republican­s, in contrast, offered to approve an extension until March 1 in exchange for future declaratio­ns to be no longer than 30-day increments and voted on by the legislatur­e. We also proposed a 10-day warning for businesses before sector rule changes can be made, unless an emergency dictates a shorter time frame. In addition, we called for lifting the capacity limits for houses of worship while maintainin­g mask and social distancing guidelines.

The original extension in September to Feb. 9 was in part to provide legislator­s an opportunit­y to open the regular session and begin the process of asserting itself as a co-equal branch. Sadly, Democrats have squandered that opportunit­y. What will be their position when the orders are extended again in April? They have turned their back on our reasonable requests to help move our government back to some level of accountabi­lity and normalcy. Gov. Lamont can now continue to spend billions of federal dollars with no legislativ­e oversight and make laws that we were elected to craft. It is simply democracy in the dark.

Our focus should be on working together, reviewing how effective certain orders have been and codifying those that have been the most useful. In other words, make laws and do our job. Gov. Lamont has received high marks during the pandemic and a review of his executive orders may demonstrat­e a judicious use of that power. But the Constituti­on created three branches of government and Democrat legislator­s have been happy to sit on the sidelines. History and voters will judge this period of unfettered control, but Democrat leaders in the legislatur­e do a grave disservice to the State of Connecticu­t for denying this public debate over how we should move forward. All we asked for was greater scrutiny, accountabi­lity and transparen­cy.

Democrats, ceding once again our collective constituti­onal responsibi­lity convenient­ly to one office on the second floor of the Capitol, is not acceptable. And it should not be to anyone who claims a stake in the future of our state, especially legislator­s who have been elected to govern and make laws.

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