Governor Ned Lamont delivered his second State of the State
on the first Wednesday in February to a General Assembly bulging with eupeptic
progressives. Democrats have been in charge of the budget writing General
Assembly for the last few decades. It is true in Connecticut, as elsewhere in
the nation, that the governor proposes budgets to the legislature, but it is
the legislature that disposes of budgets, usually in close consultation with
governors of the same party.
Lamont’s State of the State address was launched two days
after President Donald Trump delivered before a bitterly divided U.S. Congress
his State of the Nation address. Trump failed to shake Speaker of the U.S.
House’s proffered hand at the beginning of the hostilities, and Nancy Pelosi
ripped up the presidential signed State of the Union address at the end of the
hostilities, which show no sign of abating.
The handshake has an interesting history. It developed in 5th
century Greece as a means of indicating non-hostile relations. An empty, outstretched
hand offered in greeting showed that the greeter was unarmed. In the Middle
Ages, a vigorous handshake was deployed to shake from loose clothing any concealed
weaponry.
Pelosi’s quickly withdrawn outstretched hand concealed no
dagger because the downward thrust of the Democrat’s impeachment bill was still
to be deflected by Republicans. It is uncertain that the end of the process, a
dismissal of the bill of impeachment by the Republican controlled Senate, will
end attempts by Democrats to force Trump from office and so symbolically repeal
the president’s 2016 election victory over an aggrieved Hillary Clinton. Pretty
much everyone, including Trump, thinks the Democrats will be back at the same
corner, should Trump win re-election in ten months, hawking the same
impeachment elixir.
In Connecticut, there is no such deadly animosity between
Democrats and Republicans, possibly because Democrats have been ruling the
roost in the General Assembly for a good long while, longer than the young
college age progressives in the state, many of whom are working feverishly to
elevate to the White House the nation’s first socialist president, have been
alive. Familiarity with the run of
things does not breed contempt among Connecticut Republicans; it breeds
familiarity. Over long periods of time, the creaking and worn back benches
begin to feel like plush divans. Republicans in the state have never known how
to campaign. Elections in the northeast are won on social rather than economic
issues.
Democrat leader of the Senate Martin Looney liked the tone
of the State of the State address – upbeat. And Democrat leader in the House
Joe Arisimowicz thrilled to Lamont’s optimism. “I loved the idea of being the
champions of Connecticut,” he said. “At some level, we all raise our hand and
take an oath of office and we’re going to not only observe the Constitution but
we’re going to act in the taxpayers’ behalf. And every time that you say that
you can’t trust government, that’s a direct slap at the people’s trust in the
government. We need to be out there and start talking positively about
Connecticut.”
If majority Democrats were to board a CTFasttrack bus to
Hell, the trip down would be considerably relieved with Lamont as the Devil’s
co-pilot. He has a way of triumphing through shear exuberance over the most
depressing news by inflating himself with gobs of optimism. Three years ago,
Lamont noted, the Wall Street Journal was asking, “What’s the matter with
Connecticut?” But today, after Lamont jaw-jawed the opinion editors of the
Journal, the paper had changed its tone – “The state has dug a deep hole--maybe
it has now stopped digging.”
Lamont’s enthusiasm, we are told by CTMirror, “was briefly rewarded
with a bipartisan standing ovation. “The rest of the country is looking at
our state in a new light — so should you. Optimism is contagious!” Lamont
intoned.
But the hole cannot be conjured away through eupeptic
incantations. The way UP is the same as the way DOWN – only in reverse. And
there is no indication in Lamont’s directional map that the drivers, at long
last, have got the message. If high taxes, burdensome regulations and the
renting out to unelected commissions of the Constitutional getting and spending
obligations of the greatest deliberative body in the state point downwards,
then way up is plain. Reverse everything – control runaway spending, moderate
destructive ambitions, withdraw the crushing tentacles of state management from
a creative and independent marketplace, discontinue investing in failed
processes and invest in successful governance -- and Connecticut will begin to
revive. It will stop digging its own grave.
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