It's Election Day in North Carolina and Texas. Here's What to Watch
Here's What Someone Should've Said to Thom Tillis During His Kristi Noem Meltdown
Top Dem Was Asked About Nancy Pelosi's Past Remarks About Unilateral Bombings...and It...
Texas Democrats May Have Just Chosen Their Senate Nominee – but It's Not...
Texas Republican Senate Primary Race Just Took a Predictable Turn
OpenAI Adds Surveillance Ban in Deal With Pentagon
President Trump Will Crash the Nerd Prom, and Bill Kristol Is Upset Trump...
'Diversity' Is a Formula for Failure
Trump, Forever Wars and Iraq Syndrome
Outrage Erupts Over Kentucky Gun Store's Opening, Now Do Mosques
Megyn Kelly Claims US Troops Who Died in Operation Epic Fury Died for...
Roy Cooper and Mark Whatley Advance to Highly-Contested Senate Race in North Carolina
The Department of War Has Released the Identities of Four of the Heroes...
CIA-Backed Kurdish Militias Will Launch Ground Campaign in Iran Soon
Iran Has Reportedly Chosen Their Next Supreme Leader, but He Might Already Be...
Tipsheet

Foley Concedes, Connecticut Stays Blue

Foley Concedes, Connecticut Stays Blue

Flashback to 2010.

Republican businessman Tom Foley and incumbent Governor Dannel Malloy ran a tight race in Connecticut this cycle, remaining statistically tied for much of October. Foley lost to Malloy by half of a percentage point four years ago; and while this year's race has not been officially called by AP, Tom Foley all but conceded in an email sent Wednesday afternoon, saying in part:

Advertisement

"Heartfelt thanks to all of our volunteers who supported me with your contributions, time, sweat, and uplifting enthusiasm. I regret that I will not be able to deliver the dream you and I share for restoring pride and prosperity in Connecticut.

"We are part of a great democracy – the United States of America. We choose our leaders through the democratic process. I am privileged to have participated in that process. We did not win, but we were on the field and fought a good game. Our ideas will be on citizens’ minds as our leaders steer us forward. You will have an opportunity to fight for those ideas again." 

Final results showed Foley earning 48.5 percent of the vote, with Malloy clinching a narrow margin of victory at 50.4 percent.

Tuesday morning started off with a bang, as voters at polling places in Hartford were turned away because voting rosters had not been delivered by the 6:00 a.m. opening. The Connecticut Democratic Party quickly filed a lawsuit, seeking an extension for certain polling places by an hour. Superior Court Judge Carl Schuman granted a half-hour extension for two affected precincts.

Interestingly enough, an extension was also granted in 2010 for residents of the heavily Democratic city of Bridgeport.

Advertisement

The Hearst Connecticut Media CT Politics blog quoted state Republican Chairman Jerry Labriola, saying, “It’s always the Democrats. It’s always the cities. And this is right out of the Democratic Party playbook.”

Despite the close race, both candidates shared high unfavorable ratings. In the latest Qunnipiac poll, released Monday, Malloy had a 49 percent unfavorability, while Foley's unfavorable polled at 44 percent.

During his term, Malloy raised taxes and passed what some have called “the most comprehensive gun violence protection legislation in the country.”

While Foley remained relatively unclear about his particular plans for gun regulation, two major tenants of his platform were to eliminate many of the new taxes implemented under Malloy and and to reign in state spending.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos