According to Public Policy Polling,
Governor Dannel Malloy “continues to be one of the most unpopular Governors in
the country in our polling.”
Mr. Malloy’s approval-disapproval spread likely astonished most
political actors in the state, with the possible exception of the phlegmatic
Roy Occhiogrosso, the governor chief flack catcher, whose response to a
reputable, non-partisan poll showing the governor with an approval rating of a
slender 33 percent and a disapproval rating of 51 percent was a barely
suppressed yawn.
“We generally don’t comment on polls,” said Mr.
Occhiogrosso, “because what’s there to say? Polls come and go, numbers go up
and down. The governor always tries to do what he thinks is in the best
interests of the people of Connecticut, irrespective of the political
consequences.”
Politicians also come and go, and their comings and goings
are sometimes intimately connected with sliding approval ratings.
On previous occasions, Mr. Malloy has said that he is
uninterested in popularity contests. His principle business lies in
re-inventing Connecticut; in this ambition, he has patterned his political
program after that of President Barack Obama, who has been during his first
term in office busily re-inventing America.
Actually, it may be the other way around. It is always
difficult in these circumstances to determine precisely which came first, the
chicken or the egg. In his second campaign for the presidency, Mr. Obama –
slipping in the polls, but not quite as precipitously as Mr. Malloy – has begun
to chatter about millionaires paying their “fair share”; in Mr. Obama’s view, a
millionaire is anyone who earns by the sweat of his brow more than $250,000 per
year, well short of a million. With the Damoclean sword of a $15 trillion
deficit hanging over their heads, most non-millionaire taxpayers in the country
are beginning to brace themselves for a massive tax increase. Mr. Malloy, it will be recalled, is the
father of the largest tax increase in Connecticut history, compared to which
his spending cuts have been indeterminate and modest.
The similarities between Mr. Obama and Mr. Malloy are
telling. Both are young, and it is said that Mr. Obama has some Irish blood
rolling his veins.
Both are ardent travelers. According to a recent story,
Mr. Malloy will be on his way to China sometime in September, there to explore
the possibility of persuading his equivalent in China’s fascist government to
invest in Connecticut. The Chinese already are heavily invested in the foundering
U.S. economy. Mr. Malloy possibly has more miles on his pedometer than any other
Connecticut governor and has shown himself to be – the views of Jonathan Pelto
notwithstanding – a faithful progressive.
Support for unions was one of the identifying
characteristics of the 1912 presidential campaign involving trust buster and
former Republican President Teddy Roosevelt, a convert to progressive causes,
Republican President Howard Taft, a golfer whose real political ambitions would
later be fulfilled when he was appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court, Democratic
candidate and dilettante progressive Woodrow Wilson, and socialist candidate
Eugene Debs, the real progressive deal. In the coming 2012 election, the United
States will be reprising its 1912 counterpart, which some political scientists
consider one of the most defining elections in U.S. History. The 1912 election,
in which progressivism made its first and most lasting impression on American
politics, introduced into the political mainstream the central tenants of a
progressive program that reached its zenith during the administration of
Franklin Roosevelt.
Mr. Roosevelt favored the unionization of private industry
but drew a line in the sand concerning the unionization of government workers.
Willing to help union workers obtain more of the profits they helped generate
in the private sector, Mr. Roosevelt said “It is impossible to bargain collectively
with the government,” because government workers do not generate profits; they
negotiate for more tax money. A union strike against taxpayers, Mr. Roosevelt
said, would be “unthinkable and intolerable.”
In Connecticut, government workers have become the pampered
pets of politicians like Mr. Malloy and Speaker of the State House of Representatives
Chris Dovovan, both of whom were quite willing to exclude from budget
deliberations Republican leaders who had not yet bowed their necks to union
demands. Indeed, the Democratic dominated General Assembly pre-approved a
budget that later was substantially changed by Mr. Malloy negotiating in
concert with the very same union bargainers Mr. Roosevelt thought should never
have a claim on public money.
Ah well, it is the nature of progressivism to progress.
Accordingly, Connecticut has witnessed in recent days it’s governor andattorney general marching in a picket line
in support of union workers against nursing home administrators, sounding for
all the world like Mr. Debs accusing greedy administrators of the Pullman Company
of buying the favors of politicians. Not one commentator has yet accused SEBAC
of purchasing the favors of Mr. Malloy and Attorney General George Jepsen
through donations and in-kind contributions to their campaigns, the nightmare
that haunted Mr. Roosevelt’s otherwise placid nights.
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