The News-Times

Elections watchdog could be blocked from fining senators

- By Mark Pazniokas

With barely 60 seconds of debate, the Senate voted unanimousl­y late Tuesday night to transform an innocuous elections bill into a rebuke of the State Elections Enforcemen­t Commission, imposing a term limit on the agency’s director and apparently setting aside fines it imposed on a former senator and his successor.

Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, D-New Haven, only told the Senate that the 48-page rewrite of a bill creating a commission to review elections laws addresses “some relatively minor glitches” in the Citizens’ Election Program, which provides public financing for legislativ­e and statewide campaigns.

“It contains a number of changes agreed upon by all four caucuses to try to smooth out problems that have emerged and make the system work more effectivel­y in future election cycles,” Looney said, giving the chamber a terse explanatio­n of an amendment co-sponsored by him and Senate Minority Leader Len Fasano, R-North Haven.

Fasano was equally circumspec­t in his remarks on the floor: “I go with what Sen. Looney said. This is the power of bipartisan­ship right here.”

The Senate voted 35-0 for the measure, with one abstention. Sen. Rob Sampson, R-Wolcott, the lawmaker who has been fighting a fine imposed on him in 2017 for a campaign finance violation in 2014, recused himself. He said he was under the impression the measure ended the case against him.

As the co-chair of the Government Administra­tion and Elections Committee, Sen. Mae Flexer, D-Killingly, normally would have presented the bill and the amendment to the Senate. She declined to comment on the rewrite. Instead, she said, “I didn’t take out the bill. I think that’s saying a good amount.”

Sampson said he did not seek the provision that appears to block the commission from collecting a $2,000 fine against him or a $5,000 fine against his predecesso­r, Joe Markley of Southingto­n.

Asked by CT Mirror if the bill indeed ended the case against Sampson and Markley, Looney replied, “I think it does.”

The case against Sampson and Markley involves what the commission called “a bright line” prohibitio­n against publicly financed candidates using their grants to promote or attack candidates in other races.

In 2014, when Sampson was seeking re-election to the House and Markley to the Senate, they frequently attacked Gov. Dannel P. Malloy, who then was seeking reelection. In one joint mailing, they said, “Rob and Joe have consistent­ly fought Governor Malloy’s reckless spending and voted against his budget which resulted in nearly $4 Billion in new and increased taxes for Connecticu­t residents.”

Sampson and Markley said their intent was to use Malloy to make a point about their politics, not his. But the commission ruled against them. They appealed in court on free-speech grounds, and the case is under review by the state Supreme Court, Sampson said.

With a provision lifting the prohibitio­n on using public funds to attack candidates in other races, the Senate not only seemed to end the case against Sampson and Markley — but it opened the doors for Democrats to use public financing to connect their Republican opponents to Donald J. Trump in 2020, much as Markley and Sampson did with Malloy in 2014.

Among other things, the bill limits Michael Brandi, the executive director and general counsel, to two four-year terms. It leaves the power to hire and fire with the commission, though lawmakers considered making the appointmen­t subject to confirmati­on by the General Assembly, Fasano said.

Brandi was not available for comment.

There is no similar term limit on the directors of two other watchdogs, the Office of State Ethics and the Freedom of Informatio­n Commission.

The lateness of the vote and brevity of the debate Tuesday are certain to limit public awareness of the legislatio­n before the House of Representa­tives takes it up today. The Senate acted after concluding a long debate over the state budget. The 2019 session ends tonight at midnight.

The State Elections Enforcemen­t Commission is the watchdog agency that most often comes into conflict with elected officials, enforcing campaign finance and elections laws — and reviewing candidates’ applicatio­ns for public financing grants.

Candidates complained in 2018 that the commission was slow to review and act on applicatio­ns for public financing. The legislatio­n has provisions that seemed design to prod the commission to act more quickly.

To be awarded public financing, candidates must demonstrat­e public support by meeting fundraisin­g thresholds ranging from $5,000 for a state House race to $250,000 for governor.

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