One-year-olds and 18-year-olds are still wrongly losing Medicaid coverage because of administrative glitches and confusing notices, despite pledges from Department of Social Services officials to address the issues, according to the researchers who identified the problems. “[W]e want to bring to your attention the fact that the fixes agreed upon have not been implemented,” Mary […]
Report: Babies, 18-year-olds still wrongly losing Medicaid coverage
Democrats endorse Chris Murphy for U.S. Senate
New Britain — U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy won an easy first-ballot Democratic convention endorsement for U.S. Senate on Saturday with 76 percent of the vote, but former Secretary of the State Susan Bysiewicz vowed to force an Aug. 14 primary. The only question at the anticlimactic convention had been how much of a struggle Bysiewicz […]
Oakes may abandon U.S. Senate bid soon, would back Murphy over Bysiewicz
Political newcomer Matthew Oakes, an East Hartford Democrat who’s been trying to petition his way onto the Democratic primary ballot for U.S. Senate, said at Saturday’s Democratic State Convention he may soon abandon that bid. Oakes, who already has collected about 9,000 of the roughly 14,600 signatures he needs, said he would decide shortly after […]
Once again, Connecticut’s Senate seat one of the most expensive in the country
Washington — Big money is already being spent in the race for retiring Sen. Joe Lieberman’s seat, but this is just the beginning of the expected blowout. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, only one state, Florida, spent more money on a Senate race in 2010, when Republican Linda McMahon ran against former Connecticut […]
Legislative session doesn’t clear up uncertain fiscal outlook
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy downplayed long-range deficit forecasts when the legislative session opened in February, noting there was time for the state’s finances to improve. But after a spring marked by declining revenue projections and a handful of questionable cost-cutting moves, legislators from both parties conceded Thursday that the state’s fiscal outlook emerged from the […]
Former Connecticut lawmaker to fight religious oppression
Washington — Sam Gejdenson, who for 20 years represented eastern Connecticut in Congress, is now looking for “bad actors” around the world. The former Democratic congressman was named by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi to be the newest member of the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, a bipartisan, independent government body that monitors — […]
Connecticut Democrats hire Jonathan Harris as executive director
Jonathan A. Harris was named today as the new executive director of the Connecticut Democratic Party. Harris, a former state senator from West Hartford who recently announced his resignation as deputy state treasurer, succeeds Eric Hyers, who left in March to run the re-election campaign of his old boss, U.S. Rep. David Cicilline of Rhode […]
Senate Dems to House Dems: You’re not welcome
How raw are feelings between House and Senate Democrats over each chamber’s killing the other’s favored bills Wednesday, the annual session’s last night? The Senate pointedly quashed plans for the joint post-session press conference its leaders typically hold with House counterparts. “Last night, they told us they weren’t interested,” Doug Whiting, communication director for the […]
Education report card: Achievement gap lingers
Connecticut received its report card Thursday on how well its students are learning science, and it’s not a pretty picture. Scores from the U.S. Department of Education show that on national science tests, the achievement gap between low-income Connecticut students and their more affluent peers continues to be the largest in the nation. The gap between black […]
Sunday liquor sales should begin by May 20
Connecticut residents could be shopping for beer and liquor on Sundays as soon as May 20, Gov. Dannel P. Malloy said Thursday morning at a post-legislative session press conference. The governor told reporters that the bill legalizing Sunday sales hadn’t arrived on his desk yet. But he quickly added that by early next week he […]
With the session over, Malloy reclaims the stage
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy closed the annual session of the General Assembly early Thursday with a speech that attempted to reset the mood and message of an administration that struggled keep the breakneck pace of its first year. With a 10-minute, 30-second speech delivered minutes after midnight, Malloy showed uncharacteristic touches of humility, even as […]
Text of governor’s remarks at close of 2012 session
Lt. Governor Wyman, Mr. Speaker, Senator Williams, Representative Cafero, Senator McKinney. Thank you. It’s always an honor for me to address this chamber. I’ll be brief in my remarks tonight, but there are a few things that I’d like to say. Over the course of the last 16 months we have pushed more change through […]
Legislative scorecard: winners, losers (and a few that are still hanging)
The day after the annual legislative session ends is typically a time for all sides to declare victory, lament defeat, or spin one into the other. Below, our list of winners and losers from the 2012 session. Not everything that didn’t get done is dead; legislators are expected to return for a special session in […]
Senate casualty: Insurance exchange board expansion
What killed a proposal to expand the board overseeing the state’s health insurance exchange?
Special session already planned for unfinished business
Key measures needed to implement the next state budget and an overdue fix to a debt-riddled anti-pollution program were earmarked for a special session Wednesday even as lawmakers scrambled to pass more bills before the midnight adjournment deadline. Republicans said they feared legislative overtime would open a Pandora’s box of pet bills, but majority Democrats remained […]

