By CHRIS POWELL
Governor Lamont may have the campaign for governor all to himself. His vast wealth is being deployed again and is stuffing Connecticut’s airwaves and internet channels with commercials and deluging journalist e-mailboxes with press releases.
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While the governor’s challenger in the Democratic primary, Hamden state Rep. Josh Elliott, has almost qualified for $3.75 million in state Citizen Election Program campaign funds, he hasn’t received the money yet and so hasn’t deployed it yet even as the primary is only six weeks away, on August 11. People who are eager for state government to grow and spend know that Elliott is their candidate and don’t need advertising to push them, but the volume of the governor’s advertising may be effective with other Democratic voters even if it never criticizes Elliott directly.
Meanwhile the Republican nominee for governor, Greenwich state Sen. Ryan Fazio, lets most days go by without having anything to say, not even via “earned” news coverage. This is too bad, since news reports frequently expose mismanagement in state government. Even the governor’s press releases and commercials should prompt some talking back from his rivals but aren’t getting any.
For example, Lamont recently joined nine other governors in opposing federal legislation that would immunize oil and natural gas companies against state laws seeking to fine them for the pollution caused by use of their fuels. The silly rationale for these state laws is that oil and gas producers fooled the public into thinking that oil and gas are pollution-free, as if, since the industrial age began, nobody ever noticed what was coming out of smokestacks and tailpipes, and as if every state government and the federal government didn’t accept that pollution is the price of the most practical forms of energy and didn’t happily tax them rather than outlaw them.
Of course the oil and gas producers didn’t burn most of their fuels themselves. Ordinary people did — the constituents of the governors who, like Lamont, now want to blame the producers for pollution. Also, of course, those governors are not prepared to give their constituents much practical alternatives to oil and gas. They want to pretend that conventional fuels are the result of an evil conspiracy of plutocrats and not the result of longstanding policy.
Lamont and the other governors opposing the federal legislation to foreclose state laws punishing oil and gas producers are scapegoating and demagoguing. One proof of this is Lamont’s failure to propose legislation to prohibit use of oil and gas in Connecticut. Like the other governors opposing the federal legislation, Lamont doesn’t want to outlaw oil and gas and thereby stop pollution; he wants to tax them more in the name of recovering the damages of pollution, which could never be quantified specifically in regard to any particular producer.
Lamont is airing a commercial in which he claims to be protecting Connecticut against President Trump’s “chaos.” Trump is indeed producing chaos in Washington and around the world but Connecticut has plenty of its own chaos that has little to do with the president.
Apart from all the mismanagement and even corruption in state government, every week brings the usual murders, shootings, and stabbings, as well as incidents of child abuse and neglect that are overwhelming the state’s child protection agency; more reckless and even crazed driving; fires in dilapidated housing in the impoverished cities; worsening drug and alcohol abuse; and more psychotic episodes from troubled people. Trump didn’t cause those things. Neither did the governor. But getting them under control in Connecticut is the governor’s responsibility, not Trump’s.
Another Lamont commercial says he wants to end “corporate welfare.” But he has been governor for 7½ years and if Connecticut still has corporate welfare, he must approve of it.
Connecticut should discuss these things. But the only thing Elliott seems to find wrong about state government is that it doesn’t spend enough enriching the government class. As for Fazio, for the state to know what he thinks, he’ll have to show up.
Chris Powell has written about Connecticut government and politics for many years. (CPowell@cox.net)