Malloy Says He Continues To Defy The ‘Naysayers’
by Christine Stuart | May 16, 2011 11:04pm
(6) Comments | Commenting has expired
Posted to: Election 2010, Labor, State Budget
Gov. Dannel P. Malloy told his fellow Democrats Monday that they have defied expectations and they will continue to do so, just as he did in his campaign for governor.
The first Democrat to hold the office in two decades, said he was told a year ago that he could not win because he didn’t have enough money to “fight the fight.” Then once he and Lt. Gov. Nancy Wyman won “naysayers said we couldn’t put forth an honest budget.” Then the naysayers went on to say it would never pass the Democratic legislature and that Malloy would never be able to reach agreement with his “fellow state employee unions.“
“Last Friday they proved themselves wrong again,“ Malloy said referring to the tentative $1.6 billion labor agreement awaiting ratification with the 45,000 rank-and-file union members.
“The naysayers never go quietly into the night. Now they’re saying the rank-and-file members of the state unions will not support this agreement. But you know what I think, they’re wrong,“ Malloy said. “We are on the verge of sending a very important and different message to the rest of the United States.”
He said that message is that unions are prepared to be a part of the solution.
“What they’re doing in other states is scapegoating men and women, proud men and women of organized labor,” Malloy said. “But here in Connecticut, we are not doing that.”
“See in Connecticut we are pursuing a road in a different direction than 49 other states,” Malloy said.
As he did so often during the campaign he recalled returning from school and listening to his mother on the phone trying to organize other school nurses into a union. He said his father was blacklisted by the insurance industry when he tried to organize his fellow co-workers at John Hancock.
“I want you to know that because my parents believed as I do that unions are a good thing,” Malloy said. “That when people ban together and organize to protect themselves they can right what is wrong, and when they are divided and fail to do so then you understand how I feel. Let me say this as clearly as I can, I believe in the union movement and the right to organize and to bargain.”
As he made these remarks about the labor movement Malloy was drowned out by the crowd which was on its feet hooting and hollering for the governor as his speech reached a crescendo around the halfway point.
Lori Pelletier, secretary treasurer of the Connecticut AFL-CIO, said the Malloy administration was always respectful of unions and collective bargaining rights. She said she would have liked to see him increase taxes on the wealthy and corporations more, but he “didn’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.“
As for ratification of the $1.6 billion concession package, which will have to be approved by 14 of the 15 unions and 80 percent of those voting on changes to the State Employees Bargaining Agent Coalition agreement, “democracy is messy.”
Asked about whether the rank-and-file members would approve it, Pelletier said it’s a difficult process and there are lots of emotions involved, but some of the online comments regarding the proposal come from a “vocal minority.”
Roy Occhiogrosso, Malloy’s senior communications adviser, said the Democratic party is like a big family that sometimes fights amongst itself, but always defends itself when others try to attack it.
Malloy believes the rank-and-file will ratify the agreement, but that may not happen for another three weeks if the voting takes as long as it did in 2009. Meanwhile, Malloy will be forced to find another $400 million in spending cuts in order to close the gap without using the close to $1 billion in surplus built into the $40.11 billion budget over the next two years. Those cuts have not yet been proposed and will likely require legislative approval.
Tags: Malloy, naysayer, labor, unions, concessions, budget, campaign
(6) Comments
posted by: NOW What? | May 16, 2011 11:42pm
“The naysayers never go quietly into the night. Now they’re saying the rank-and-file members of the state unions will not support this agreement. But you know what I think, they’re wrong,“ Malloy said. “We are on the verge of sending a very important and different message to the rest of the United States.”
- Well, SO far I’d say I have to agree with him.
posted by: Disgruntled | May 17, 2011 8:24am
The party always got a good reception at Nuremberg too—until the trials after the war.
The jillions saved over the next thousand years,great!
Connecticut is open for business and soon The Nutmeg King can hit the road and spread the word!
Start booking the hotels and business class.
This is one “naysayer” who has warned and will continue to warn…Dan is a phoney.
posted by: Noteworthy | May 17, 2011 9:37am
Excuse me Governor. Here’s a reality check - you had the money to compete because you only raised a paltry $250K and got millions of dollars from taxpayers which you then used to populate the airwaves with allegations you knew were false. It was not honorable nor did it defy any naysayers. I don’t know who said you couldn’t get a budget through the Demo controlled legislature that raises a record amount of new taxes? Who specifically said that? Sounds like a straw man to me - that means fake, governor. Democrats have been raising taxes and fees for years and advocated even higher rates. $3 billion in new taxes should be enough for any Democrat in the legislature. As for the union contract, we will see if it actually has the savings. I suspect its accounting is as dubious as the legislature’s claim and yours, that there are real cuts in spending even as you actually increase spending. In the end, spending increases by 5%. That’s not a cut.
posted by: ASTANVET | May 17, 2011 2:20pm
Typical Malloy, head in the sand. He must be much smarter than the rest of us, and I’m sure he’ll keep fighting along on the path he has set us on. Much like the town hall meetings where he apparently listened to no one’s opinion but his own, he is continuing down his path of fiscal and social destruction by over taxing, and job killing across the board. When the size of government outpaces the growth of a State economy you are destined for disaster. How much bigger is the size of the budget today vs. a budget of 20 (+) years ago? What was it, 250 times the amount? How many jobs have been created in the last 20 years??? Oh, right… they are stagnant, if not negative job growth. How long has the General Assembly been in control by the democrats? 40-50 years? The only balance we had to the insane course set by the democrat general assembly was a republican governor… now we don’t even have that. So Dannel will continue the bus plans that cost millions per mile, a crazy tax plan, mandatory sick time, and the eventual landslide of anti-business legislation which will send us into the toilet. Keep that stiff upper lip Dan, keep defying logic…errrrr… I mean the naysayers.
posted by: StunningContradiction | May 17, 2011 3:53pm
This particular union employee will probably vote against the agreement. I invite others to do the same.
posted by: Disgruntled | May 17, 2011 4:19pm
It is not party specific anymore. It is intelligent leadership (sadly lacking for many,many years) versus foolish leadership. And we have an abundance of fools who wish to lead.
Just remain calm.
Think before you vote next time and remember—CONNECTICUT IS OPEN FOR BUSINESS!