Antisthenes I: You’ve said there is no political problem that does not lend itself to a political solution, and yet problems associated with improvident spending that are everywhere politically caused – such as inflation, excessive spending and state debt, and seemingly endless political campaigning – are rarely addressed. Why? C: It does not benefit an incumbent party in power committed to ever-increasing spending to settle such problems. In Connecticut especially, but throughout the nation as well, automatic spending increases, so called “fixed costs”, strip legislatures of their constitutional obligations. Constitutionally, legislatures are tasked with getting and spending. That means that every dollar drawn into the treasury through taxation and every dollar disbursed by the legislature should be voted up or down by small “r” republican legislators. Fixed costs loosen such constitutional obligations. If fixed costs are not unconstitutional, they most certainly are...
Sen. Dick Blumenthal General Assembly Members Have Vacated the Premises. It’s Over … For Now BLOG The Blumenthals, father Dick and son Matt, were there in the picture featured on the front page, top of the fold, in the Hartford Courant story, “ With tone of defiance and new laws, Connecticut leaders push back hard against Trump and ICE .” Both were smiling broadly as Governor Ned Lamont signed Bill 349 which, the Courant reminds us, “allows citizens to sue federal immigration agents if they believe that their civil rights have been violated. In addition, the bill prevents all law enforcement officers, including from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency, known as ICE [Federal Immigration and Customs Enforcement], from wearing masks, except in limited situations.” Laws restraining police are old hat in Connecticut. Police “ reform laws ” affecting the personal partial immunity of individual police officers reduce the inclination of recruits to jo...