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    Thursday, April 25, 2024

    Malloy opens session with plea for ‘Connecticut fairness’

    Gov. Dannel P. Malloy delivers his annual State of the State address before a joint session of the Connecticut General Assembly in Hartford on Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. (Tim Martin/The Day)
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    In his final State of the State address, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy proposed a progressive agenda Wednesday to the legislators who shut him out of last year’s budget talks, promising to help fellow Democrats raise the minimum wage, enact a family paid medical leave law, address sexual harassment and take a stand on pay equity as acts of “Connecticut fairness.”

    His attempt to shape the political agenda of his final year as governor was an early effort to frame his legacy. Malloy cast his proposals as overdue expansions and updates of policies enacted in his tumultuous first seven years in office, including first-in-the-nation laws that raised the minimum wage to $10.10 and required certain private employers to offer paid sick days.

    Malloy, 62, the first Democrat elected governor of Connecticut in a generation, coming to office with the narrowest win by any governor here in more than a half-century, seems certain to exit as one of the least popular in the U.S., possessing little leverage over a closely divided legislature already focused on re-election campaigns.

    But before an audience that included his newborn granddaughter, Malloy gamely embraced the zeitgeist of the moment, repeatedly seeking common cause with Democrat legislators hungry to debate anything other than the budget. He contrasted the relative comity of Connecticut and its General Assembly with the divisions of Washington and Congress and the angry rhetoric of President Donald Trump, never mentioning the president by name.

    Malloy released his budget proposals Monday, an effort to give himself room to talk about other things. For a day at least, the governor succeeded in stepping from beneath the cloud of the state’s chronic fiscal and economic challenges, which have helped keep his approval ratings consistently below 25 percent.

    Unburdened, Malloy spoke with a voice unheard in recent years as he talked about economic justice, sexual harassment, young Dreamers seeking legal status, the dangers of climate change, and the need to preserve access to health care. Legislators rewarded him with applause, if not equally from both sides of the aisle, interrupting three dozen times in a 35-minute speech that covered a range of issues under the unifying umbrella of fairness.

    “We find ourselves at a defining moment in our history, as a state and as a nation. We can no longer afford the luxury of silence, or the alluring comfort of the status quo,” Malloy said. ”This year, in the face of growing national inequity and unfairness, I want to begin a conversation about a series of common-sense changes we can adopt to advance our proud tradition of ‘Connecticut Fairness.'”

    Malloy wore a pink ribbon on his lapel, as did many lawmakers, a gesture to the MeToo movement against sexual harassment.

    “Far too many people have been denigrated, intimidated and violated in their workplace. I want to applaud the legions of courageous women across our nation who have come forward to share their stories of sexual harassment. The reality is we are long overdue for an honest reckoning over harassment in the workplace,” Malloy said. “There is an immediate need to change workplace culture — from small towns to Hollywood, from the mailroom to the boardroom, and from the jailhouse to the statehouse, all the way up to the White House.”

    His speech complemented the “values agenda” released the previous day by House and Senate Democrats, a statement of goals for the three-month session that opened Wednesday and the re-election campaigns to follow. Malloy committed himself to backing the Democrats’ plan to pass a bill that would raise the minimum wage by $1 every year until it hits $15, as well as a paid-family-leave law. The latter is an employee-funded program that has been proposed in each of the past three years, never coming to a vote.

    Malloy said working people should not fear losing their jobs just because they get sick.

    “It’s why in 2011 we passed the first paid sick law in the nation. Since then, eight states and Washington, D.C., have followed our lead,” Malloy said. “A person should not worry about losing wages when they catch the flu. A parent should not need to choose between lost pay and taking care of a sick child. And customers should not worry about being served by a sick employee. This year, the opportunity is before us to improve our paid sick leave laws. Let’s catch up with states that have now surpassed us on this front.”

    Malloy said Connecticut, which has cut the number of its uninsured residents by half since the passage of the Affordable Care Act during the administration of President Barack Obama, should preserve the law against attacks in Washington.

    “Connecticut Fairness should mean keeping health insurance affordable for everyone. We must take action to ensure stability in our insurance marketplace and to contain premium costs for consumers. We can do something our neighbors in Massachusetts have already done on a bipartisan basis and under a Republican governor,” he said. “Together, let’s pass a bill that preserves the most vital elements of the Affordable Care Act — including the individual mandate. Let’s make it clear that in Connecticut, health care is a fundamental right.”

    The governor also reiterated his call for the legislature to ban “bump stocks,” the accessory that allowed the Las Vegas gunman to effectively convert semi-automatic rifles into machine guns.

    His speech played well to the Democratic base.

    “I thought it was a great way to set the temperature,” said Lori J. Pelletier, president of the Connecticut AFL-CIO, adding that “making sure everyone has a good-paying job is not a partisan issue. It’s about what’s good for the state of Connecticut.”

    A rapprochement by the governor and legislative Democrats would be significant, but no guarantee of substantive change. The Senate remains evenly divided between Democrats and Republicans, and the defection of just four Democrats on any issue in the House gives the GOP effective control.

    Democrats loved hearing a speech about topics other than the budget. Republicans, who hope to win control of both chambers this fall for the first time since Ronald Reagan’s re-election landslide of 1984, were quick to change the conversation back to the Democrats’ stewardship of the state’s finances.

    House Minority Leader Themis Klarides, R-Derby, and Senate Republican leader Len Fasano of North Haven both labeled the governor’s address as “purely political.”

    “All you need to know is that in a state overwhelmed with taxes, debt and deficits, the governor did not utter one word about the economy,” Klarides said. “That’s because they have no positive record to run on.”

    Fasano ridiculed the governor’s emphasis on fairness as a theme.

    “Where is the fairness in that we are one of the highest-taxed states in the country?” Fasano said. “Where is the fairness in an economy that is failing? That’s the fairness I want to talk about.”

    Joseph F. Brennan, the president of the Connecticut Business and Industry Association, said his members expect government to continue efforts to stabilize finances and to stimulate the economy, despite the obstacles of election-year politics.

    “The business community is starting to grow our economy at a higher rate than we have seen in years, and we can’t slow down the process,” Brennan said.

    The field of gubernatorial contenders gave Malloy’s address mixed reviews, splitting along predictable partisan lines.

    Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton and former U.S. Comptroller David Walker, both Republicans, said the governor spoke volumes by saying little about fiscal issues.

    “I was surprised and disappointed,” Walker said, adding that while pay equity, for example, is an important issue, “if we don’t put our finances in order, everyone is going to suffer.”

    With analysts projecting a deficit topping $5 billion in the two-year state budget cycle immediately after the election, “this is the Connecticut moment,” Boughton said. “This is the 800-pound gorilla in the room.”

    But Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin, a Democrat and former general counsel to Malloy, praised the governor’s agenda. “You have a Democratic Party that seems united in pushing issues of fairness and economic fairness,” Bronin said. “I hope that in Connecticut we can rise above the divisive partisanship we see in Washington and in other parts of the country.”

    Mark Pazniokas and Keith M. Phaneuf are reporters for The Connecticut Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2018 © The Connecticut Mirror.

    kphaneuf@ctmirror.org

    mpazniokas@ctmirror.org

    Gov. Dannel P. Malloy delivers his annual State of the State address, promising to help fellow Democrats raise the minimum wage, enact a family paid-medical-leave law, address sexual harassment and take a stand on pay equity as acts of “Connecticut fairness.” (Tim Martin/The Day)
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    State Senator Paul Formica (R), who represents the 20th Senate District, center, shares a laugh with a well wisher after Governor Dannel P. Malloy delivered his annual State of the State address before a joint-session of the Connecticut General Assembly in Hartford, Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. (Tim Martin/The Day)
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    Lt. Governor Nancy Wyman becomes emotional as she receives a standing ovation while introducing dignitaries, prior to Governor Dannel P. Malloy delivering his annual State of the State address before a joint-session of the Connecticut General Assembly in Hartford, Wednesday, Feb. 7, 2018. (Tim Martin/The Day)
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