The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lamont, Stefanowsk­i spar again

Candidates hit on familiar themes

- By Ken Dixon

NEW HAVEN — The taunting started on the sidewalk late Monday afternoon, took a break during a cocktail-and-appetizer reception, then resumed — on and off the stage — at the historic Shubert Theatre in the second gubernator­ial debate.

While the pre-event animosity of their supporters did not equal the crescendo of last week’s physical altercatio­ns in New London, the second of five scheduled debates between Bob Stefanowsk­i of Madison and Ned Lamont of Greenwich again revealed little in the realm of public policy.

Stefanowsk­i will only appear in four televised debates. He did not appear at a fifth one, with independen­t candidate Oz Griebel, held earlier this month.

Lamont kept up his challenge to Stefanowsk­i, asking him to reveal how he would eliminate the state’s income tax without the type of massive spending cuts that caused a revolt of Republican lawmakers in Kansas.

Stefanowsk­i kept hammering Lamont on a perceived closeness to Gov. Dannel P. Malloy and an

expansion of taxes, including highway tolls and a $15-anhour minimum wage that would hurt small business.

“Decades of big government and tax increases have decimated this state,” Stefanowsk­i said. “The time for big government is over. The time for tax cuts is here.”

“I have never heard such arrogance, ‘my way or the highway, I’m right, you’re wrong,’ ” Lamont countered, before being buried in catcalls from the Stefanowsk­i part of the crowd. “We need a governor who can reach out across the aisle. We need somebody who has the respect of labor to get to the table and make the real tough changes to our pension plan going forward.”

During an hourlong confrontat­ion before about 1,000 people, sponsored by the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Realtors and WTNH News 8, Stefanowsk­i continued to try to pin the unpopulari­ty of Malloy upon Lamont, using his campaign battle cry of promises to lower taxes as a shield against most other questions.

Lamont warned that Stefanowsk­i would bring President Donald Trump’s divisive policies to blue state Connecticu­t.

“The choice in this election is becoming crystal clear,” Stefanowsk­i said to a roar from supporters — who were asked to remain quiet. “He’s going to continue eight years of horrible economic policy that got us in this mess. I’ll cut taxes. I’ll make government smaller and more efficient.”

He reiterated his supplyside mantra that tax cuts would pay for themselves.

“Cutting taxes actually raises revenue in the long run,” Stefanowsk­i said.

“I’m the guy who ran against Dan Malloy eight years ago,” Lamont said, warning that his Republican contender would decimate the $20 billion annual budget, sharply reducing revenues, gutting education. “I will not raise the income tax. I will cut the property tax (and) train children for the 21st century jobs.” His own supporters also cheered loudly.

“Talk about pandering to the polls,” Lamont said of Stefanowsk­i’s economic plan. He promised a “strong” University of Connecticu­t.

“It’s about how do we get this state organized around education,” Stefanowsk­i said, highlighti­ng his public education growing up in North Haven, and at the same time positionin­g the privately educated Lamont as an elite.

Eliminatin­g the income tax would make the state more competitiv­e, Stefanowsk­i said in what has become his campaign hallmark.

“I think Bob’s tax plan would drive our state into a dead stop,” Lamont rejoined. “I think it’s a false promise.”

Lamont said if elected he would become the first governor in 80 years to have started his own business.

“I will make sure we are rowing in the same direction,” Lamont said when asked how he would cooperate with industry leaders.

Stefanowsk­i then revisited a jab made against Lamont during the Democratic primary, charging that he laid off 60 percent of the employees of his Greenwich basedcable TV company.

“You should be not be talking down small business. Look at UBS,” Lamont railed.

Both companies where Stefanowsk­i was an executive failed in the state, including the headquarte­rs of General Electric, which was recently kicked off the Dow Industrial index after being lured to Boston with millions of dollars in incentives.

“Three weeks ago he was raising income taxes,” Stefanowsk­i said with a weak grin playing to his supporters, who ignored the request for quiet. “Now he’s a tax cutter. I don’t know about you, but I see higher taxes coming from a mile away.”

Lamont recounted that in his successful primary challenge to U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman in 2006, he upset Democratic leaders, but it was the right thing to do at the time.

“I wish you had won your Senate run because everything would be perfect,” Stefanowsk­i quipped, to yet another burst of loud laughter from his supporters, who made up more than half the audience.

 ?? Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Candidates for governor Bob Stefanowsk­i left, and Ned Lamont debate Monday evening at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven.
Peter Hvizdak / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Candidates for governor Bob Stefanowsk­i left, and Ned Lamont debate Monday evening at the Shubert Theatre in New Haven.

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