Log In


Reset Password
  • MENU
    State
    Friday, April 26, 2024

    Nancy Wyman says she won’t run for governor in 2018

    Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman said Thursday she will not run for governor in 2018, ending months of personal contemplation and political calculation. Her decision deprives the Democratic Party of its highest-profile contender, while sparing it from a campaign that could have struggled to emerge from the shadow of an unpopular incumbent, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy.

    Wyman, 71, is a popular figure among Democratic insiders and the winner of six statewide elections — four as comptroller and two as lieutenant governor. She said she finalized her decision Monday after months of talks with family and friends about the potential costs and benefits of trying to succeed Malloy as governor.

    Her decision leaves Democrats with one declared candidate, Middletown Mayor Dan Drew, and four others who have raised significant funds through exploratory committees, but none has emerged as a front-runner. With Wyman out of the race, Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin and former Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz are expected to take a look at running.

    Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim, former state Sen. Jonathan Harris, and two political newcomers, former federal prosecutor Chris Mattei and former Wall Street executive Dita Bhargava, have been raising money for months in exploratory campaigns. Sean Connolly, the former commissioner of veterans’ affairs, recently joined them.

    Wyman, whose style of politics leans toward conciliation, not confrontation, said the evolving nature of modern campaigning played a role in her decision. The routine savaging of candidates on social media takes a toll on families, one that she was uncomfortable seeing exacted on her husband, children and grandchildren.

    Had she run, Wyman said in an interview with CT Mirror, she believed she could establish an identity separate from Malloy, despite seven years of standing by his side and campaigning for him twice.

    “I am appreciative to Dan for giving me this opportunity to serve as lieutenant governor, and I do think in the future people will look back at him and realize the good things he has done,” she said. “But I would stand up and say, ‘I’m going to show you we are two separate people. We agree on things, a lot of things. And we disagree on a lot of things, like being married to my husband of 51 years. I believe I could stand on my own record."

    “Dan Malloy is not the reason I am not running,” she said.

    As the presiding officer of the state Senate, Wyman played a significant role in the Democrats maintaining control of the agenda in a chamber evenly divided among Democrats and Republicans since January. She cast a tie-breaking vote in February to ratify a concessions deal with state employees that is certain to be a campaign issue in 2018.

    Democrats said the deal makes significant structural changes in the underfunded employee retirement system, while Republicans complained it did not go far enough and locked in benefits far too long, until 2027.

    The Republican Governors Association exulted, noting that Attorney General George Jepsen and Comptroller Kevin P. Lembo previously declined to run, leaving Democrats without a top-tier candidate.

    Nick Balletto, the Democratic state chairman, said he expected Wyman to be active on behalf of the Democratic ticket next year.

    “I am confident that, with Nancy continuing to serve on the front line, we will build on the momentum we showed last Tuesday, activate a grass-roots movement to spread the message that change starts at home, and win up and down the ballot next fall,” he said.

    Wyman, whose voice still carries the inflections of an upbringing in Brooklyn, N.Y., entered politics running for the Board of Education in Tolland, then for the state House of Representatives, where she became co-chair of the Education Committee. She was elected state comptroller in 1994, an office responsible for overseeing health and retirement benefits for 200,000 state employees and retirees, as well as providing a monthly and year-end analysis of state finances.

    Malloy tried and failed to recruit her as a running mate in 2006, his first run for governor. She agreed in 2010, giving the Stamford mayor a partner on good terms with a broad range of Democratic constituency groups.

    Since finalizing her decision Monday, Wyman said she had tried to avoid conversations with supporters who still were urging her to run. On Wednesday, she said, nuns at a fundraiser for the House of Bread soup kitchen in Hartford made a case for her candidacy.

    Wyman said no one was going to change her mind.

    “Not even nuns,” Wyman said. She laughed and added, “But even being Jewish, they got to me with Catholic guilt.”

    Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticut Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2017 © The Connecticut Mirror.

    mpazniokas@ctmirror.org

    Comment threads are monitored for 48 hours after publication and then closed.