News

Gov. Ned Lamont’s recent veto of HB 5002, a sweeping housing reform bill, is the latest act in this theater of quiet cruelty.
They complain Connecticut does not spend enough money on public education. We spend $25,000 a year per public school pupil, ...
Lamont should not seek a third term as governor. Our Connecticut Democratic Party should choose a new leader to steer our ...
Prompted by a large setback from Gov. Ned Lamont’s veto, top leaders at the state Capitol are headed back to the drawing ...
State employee unions have been some of the most vocal critics of spending caps, and say they’ve led to dangerous ...
Gov. Ned Lamont hinted that he’d been engaged in talks with the Trump administration and state leaders in New York about ...
We already saw the damage that having extreme liberal campaign centerpieces has done to our nation and the impact upon all of ...
The ultimate cost of these historic cuts to Medicaid and SNAP will be human lives—the unnecessary death of Connecticut ...
Immediately after signing the bills, Lamont reiterated his support for a chief cause of concern among climate advocates: ...
Lawmakers will adjust the bill, with debate likely to focus on controversial issues like mandates to build housing and ...
Since most goods delivered to CT come by truck, changes in the diesel tax can impact the price of groceries, clothing, ...
SHELTON — Marissa Gillett, the embattled chairwoman of the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority who is involved in an active ...