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    Thursday, April 18, 2024

    Connecticut House moves up session out of ‘abundance of caution’

    The mob attack on the U.S. Capitol last week and concerns about potential unrest next week prompted Connecticut House leaders Wednesday to abruptly move up to Thursday a session necessary to act on expiring judicial appointments.

    The move is prompted by “an abundance of caution” and not specific threats of disruption next week in Hartford, the House leaders said. The state lawmakers had been expected to meet next Wednesday, Jan. 20, the same day as the inauguration of Joe Biden in Washington.

    House Speaker Matt Ritter, D-Hartford, and House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora, R-North Branford, agreed to suspend the rules concerning advance notice and act quickly on the nominations of 13 jurists.

    “We have a responsibility for the safety of legislators, staff, Capitol Police and the general public — and we take that responsibility seriously,” the leaders said in a joint statement. “Given the current uncertainty and unpredictability, we want to act on the judicial nominations that are before us as soon as possible.”

    Judges are appointed to eight-year terms, subject to renomination and legislative confirmation. With the end of the judicial terms rapidly approaching, a delay next week could have forced them, at least temporarily, from the bench, Ritter said.

    Supreme Court Justice Andrew J. McDonald is the most prominent of the jurists up for reappointment. The confirmations of four Superior Court judges and senior judges and eight trial referees also are on the House agenda.

    “The speaker and I discussed it late last night and made the final decision this morning at 6 a.m.,” Candelora said.

    There is concern about protests and disruption in state capitals across the country as the inauguration approaches.

    “So, we’re just trying to get our work done sooner,” Candelora said.

    The General Assembly opened its 2021 session last Wednesday morning, hours before a mob supporting President Donald J. Trump breached the U.S. Capitol and briefly stopped the certification of Biden’s victory.

    On that day, the biggest threat to state lawmakers was deemed to be COVID-19. The state House and Senate convened outside the Capitol to take the oath of office and elect Ritter as the new speaker.

    “We would not have been able to do that on Wednesday had that incident at the U.S. Capitol occurred prior to that,” Ritter said.

    The State Capitol remains closed to the public due to COVID-19. Legislative committees are working virtually, their meetings and hearings carried live through links on the legislature’s webpage and on the public affairs network, CT-N.

    But lawmakers must be at the Capitol or in their offices at the Legislative Office Building to cast floor votes on legislation and nominations. Access to the chambers is limited to lawmakers who are lined up to debate.

    Mark Pazniokas is a reporter for The Connecticut Mirror (www.ctmirror.org). Copyright 2021 © The Connecticut Mirror.

    mpazniokas@ctmirror.org

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