Whose responsibility?

Secretary of the state of Connecticut has suddenly become more important than we might have thought for the newly elected Denise Merrill, who will have to ensure that nothing like the election of 2010 ever happens again.

She may actually have to change the culture of the place because she’s succeeding a secretary who says the office has no responsibility for election debacles. At least that’s what Susan Bysiewicz claimed when she was asked who was to blame for Bridgeport not having enough ballots for its voters. “I lay it squarely on the registrars,†said the secretary, who apparently believes the buck stops just before you get to Bridgeport.

But if it turns out elections do remain the responsibility of the state’s chief elections official, Merrill, the former Democratic House majority leader, will have to alter her own pre-election posture a bit. As the Associated Press reported in October, both she and her Republican opponent, Jerry Farrell, ran as if their most important role in state government was job creation. (The secretary’s office registers new businesses, which presumably exist before they register, yet both candidates talked about helping potential businesses get loans, something they would be in no position to do. But then, there were probably candidates for dog catcher somewhere running as job creators.)

But now that the bizarre 2010 election is more or less behind us, Merrill may agree it is more important for the secretary of the state to make sure voters have ballots than it is for small businesses to have loans.

The trouble election night started because the registrars in Bridgeport printed 21,000 ballots for nearly 70,000 voters. This was a tight, but not a terrible estimate, based on past off-year elections, but when it was learned, several days before the election, that President Obama would visit Bridgeport to get out the predominantly Democratic vote, someone should have noticed. Maybe someone in Bridgeport, like the mayor, if not the incompetent registrars, or maybe someone in Hartford, like the secretary of the state or her underlings.

Bysiewicz ultimately did decide she was in charge of one phase of the voting, the unofficial returns. Before the count was even finished, she checked out those iffy, unofficial returns and quickly rushed to announce fellow Democrat Dan Malloy’s great, unofficial victory.

Malloy happily agreed and went to the Capitol to announce that he was forming a transition team to smooth the way to his anticipated inauguration, premature as it might have been.

I think former Gov. Lowell Weicker spoke for a lot of voters when he called these antics “an affront to our democratic principles and to the state of Connecticut that a Democratic secretary of state declared an unofficial winner, only to have that unofficial winner enter the state Capitol announcing his governorship and his staff.

“P.S.,†added Weicker. “I did not vote for Tom Foley.â€

Neither did I. When, in fact, this campaign began a year ago, I didn’t think I’d be voting for Foley or Malloy for governor. Foley was running for the Senate back then, thinking his opponent would be the beleaguered Chris Dodd, but when Dodd dropped out and Dick Blumenthal emerged as his likely successor and the $50 million woman said she’d like to be the Republican nominee, Foley decided he’d make a much better governor.

Malloy was running for governor then, but he was far behind in the polls, with only 12 percent of the Democrats favoring him to 42 percent for the Democratic front runner and likely nominee—Susan Bysiewicz.

So, you see, it could have been worse.

Dick Ahles is a retired journalist from Simsbury. E-mail him at dahles@hotmail.com.

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