Following Vice President Joe Biden’s visit to Connecticut,
in the course of which Governor Dannel Malloy short circuited three Sandy Hook investigations -- including an investigation impaneled by the governor himself –
choosing instead to put forward his own gun restriction proposals, all of which
dovetail neatly with President Barack Obama’s gun restrictions, the president,
according to a short piece in the Hartford Courant’s Capitol Watch column,
“tapped Gov. Malloy to serve on the National Council of Governors, making him
one of a bipartisan group of 10 state governors, five from each party, on the
Council.”
Powell, Pesci Substack The Journal Inquirer (JI), one of the last independent newspapers in Connecticut, is now a part of the Hearst Media chain. Hearst has been growing by leaps and bounds in the state during the last decade. At the same time, many newspapers in Connecticut have shrunk in size, the result, some people seem to think, of ad revenue smaller newspapers have lost to internet sites and a declining newspaper reading public. Surviving papers are now seeking to recover the lost revenue by erecting “pay walls.” Like most besieged businesses, newspapers also are attempting to recoup lost revenue through staff reductions, reductions in the size of the product – both candy bars and newspapers are much smaller than they had been in the past – and sell-offs to larger chains that operate according to the social Darwinian principles of monopolistic “red in tooth and claw” giant corporations. The first principle of the successful mega-firm is: Buy out your predator before he swallows
Comments
If he is counting on popular approval of his style, of his being a man of action, another "maverick" he is making a mistake. It's not enough to justify the idiotic busway, for example, to point out that he imposed it on us in spite of the fact that nobody wants it. The maverick thing works better when the policies fought for can plausibly be rationalized.
The Hartford Courant has a reader poll on the gun issue. Obviously, not scientific, etc., but encouraging none the less.
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What do you think?
(Note: This is an unscientific poll.)
Is Gov. Malloy right to try to ram through new gun laws?
Yes. The public is fed up with current laws that let anyone buy a gun. As he says, "there are clear, common-sense steps we can take right now." (45 responses)
2%
No. He's short-circuiting the careful work of groups studying the issue -- including his own. Democracy takes longer than dictatorship, but it's generally fairer and better for all. It's not easy to balance constitutional rights with public safety. (376 responses)
13%
Yes. The longer that task forces take on this, the weaker their proposals will get, watered down by the gun lobby. (37 responses)
1%
No. The state has some of the harshest gun laws in the country, and doesn't need any more. The governor is just grabbing the spotlight. (2425 responses)
84%
2883 total responses
"I think it fair to suggest that this Governor is primarily motivated by political self-interest. But, perhaps he's not aiming for future electoral success so much as he is hoping to ascend into the management elite through political appointment."
I agree, and in any event, I think he has no chance of electoral success on the national scale. His own son's multiple run-ins with the law would surely surface in the national media (no doubt pointed to that history by a challenging member of his own party). Remember Joe Biden's campaign implosion in 1988 at the hand's of Mike Dukakis' campaign manager, John Sasso for Biden's happy and willing plagiarism of Neil Kinnock's speech.
See, e.g.: http://unconventionalwisdom.typepad.com/unconventional_wisdom/2004/09/who_is_john_sas.html
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I'm with you. I think his "style" so offensive, his policies so ridiculous and destructive that he'll have difficulty being re-elected even here in Nutmeg Land.
Don: Somehow I don't see Malloy getting the same "deference" from the MSM that it showers on Obama.