The
recent elections have shown Hartford an important fact: the 120,000 daily riders of Metro-North have
political power.
The
Commuter Action Group,
of which I am founder, endorsed only five candidates for election and they were
all winners. (Trust me, there were many
others seeking our endorsement, but they didn’t have the track-records (pun
intended) to warrant our support.)
Those
we backed have long supported mass transit. They have fought for more funding
and understand their commuting constituents’ frustrations. All we
did was remind voting commuters who were their real friends in Hartford versus
those who were just paying lip-service to the issue during a campaign.
While
I have disagreed with him in the past (and will probably do so again), Governor
Malloy was an easy choice. His opponent
was just the latest dilettante billionaire to be chosen by the GOP (remember
Linda McMahon’s two runs for office costing $97 million?), by-passing
experience political veterans. Tom Foley
was just clueless, saying such things as “we spend too much on mass transit” and surrounding himself with “yes-men” advisors.
Even his fellow Republicans on the ballot couldn’t talk sense into him.
What
would give Foley or McMahon, neither of whom have ever been elected to
anything, the idea that their track records as CEO’s would qualify them for the
job of Governor? A CEO can snap his
fingers and say “do this or you’re fired”, but a Governor has to deal with a
legislature, and in Foley’s case, it would have been of the opposing
party. Good luck with that.
Trust
me… I am not a fan of one-party rule. With
their huge majority and deep pockets I think the Democrats in this state have
become abusive bullies.
So
why does the GOP keep choosing these kinds of candidates, aside from the fact
that they can bankroll their own campaigns?
What a shame that veteran State Senator John McKinney didn’t get a chance to run against
Malloy. McKinney was
very strong on transportation issues. That would have been an interesting
race. Maybe in 2018?
Because
we are non-partisan, the Commuter Action Group also endorsed three Republicans…
State Senator Toni Boucher and State Rep’s Gail Lavielle and Tony Hwang, as
well as Democrat Jonathan Steinberg.
They were all winners, not because of our endorsement but because we helped
remind commuters they have been strong allies in Hartford.
What
did we ask for our endorsement? Only a
single pledge: that, if elected, they
would promise to do something never done before… to caucus, Republicans and
Democrats together, with fellow lawmakers from electoral districts representing
commuters.
It
was amazing for me to learn that doesn’t happen… that R’s and D’s from
Fairfield County never get together to present a united front against up-state
lawmakers’ attempts to cut funding for our trains. Well, it will happen now!
Back
in the dark days of February when the Commuter Action Group was formed, I
reminded Hartford lawmakers that if they didn’t come to the rescue of our
trains, that commuters would “remember in November” who their friends
were. And clearly they did.
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