Connecticut Commentary will not here forecast the race of governor in Connecticut and contingent races. It may be more instructive to lay out for voters the correlation of political forces in Connecticut most of which favor Democrats. The last Republican governor of Connecticut was Jodi Rell, who got along famously with Democrats, as did her predecessor, Governor John Rowland, untimely booted from office during his historic making third term. Governor Ned Lamont hopes to replicate Rowlands’s record. Since Rell, Republican influence in the state’s General Assembly has diminished significantly. Democrats now enjoy a nearly veto-proof majority in the state legislature, not that there is any pressing need to veto measures supported by Lamont. All so called “moderate” Republican members of the state’s U.S. Congressional Delegation have been replaced by far less moderates Democrats who favor, unsurprisingly, leftist solutions to pressing budget deficits. Connecticut’s co...
Putin We know that most politicians pursue hyperbole as an avocation, and some are better at this than others. It is generally agreed that President Donald Trump is a master of the art of persuasion by exaggeration. But he is not a lone practitioner. In a serious democracy, practitioners would receive a death sentence for misleading the public. In every hyperbole, a staple of all comedy, a lie lies asleep in bed with a truth. To lie is knowingly to say the thing that is not. The only lie consistently reproved by our free – and increasingly thin and costly newspaper media – is hypocrisy. But there is a saving grace to hypocrisy which, we are told, is “the compliment vice pays to virtue.” To mislead is a vice, but the politician who gives himself over to hypocrisy hangs onto the truth with one hand while bidding it good-bye – hopefully, temporarily – with the other. The hypocrite is not morally deracinated. He knows that the exception he relies upon really does prove, rather t...