Showing posts with label primary. Show all posts
Showing posts with label primary. Show all posts

August 12, 2014

2010 primary results in Bristol, for statewide offices

Here are the results of the 2010 primaries in Bristol, which should come in handy for making sense of today's numbers:

Republicans
Governor:
Tom Foley -- 477
Mike Fedele -- 543
Oz Griebel -- 303

Lieutenant Governor:
Mark Boughton -- 564
Lisa Wilson-Foley -- 681

U.S. Senator:
Linda McMahon -- 679
Peter Schiff -- 337
Rob Simmons -- 330

Congress:
Ann Brickley -- 632
Mark Zydanowicz -- 649

Attorney General:
Martha Dean -- 777
Ross Garber -- 510
Democrats:
Governor:
Dan Malloy -- 1,808
Ned Lamont -- 1,369

Lieutenant Governor:
Nancy Wyman -- 1,984
Mary Glassman -- 1,154

Secretary of the State:
Denise Merrill -- 1,975
Gerry Garcia -- 1,137

Comptroller:
Kevin Lembo -- 2,130
Michael Jarjura -- 905


Copyright 2014 All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Voters scarce in Bristol, but there are a few

Bristol Elks Club this morning
You have to look pretty hard to find a voter in Bristol today.
Though both Republicans and Democrats are holding a primary, turnout has been abysmal so far.
Registrars office this morning
In the most hotly contested race, the GOP had turned out 242 voters in the first three hours of the day -- out of a total of 6,525 in all. That's a measly 3.7 percent.
Even so, I did find a voter.
At Greene-Hills School, Jim Couture, who brought along his young daughter, said he headed to the polls to protect his Second Amendment rights.
Couture said he based his choices on which candidates defended gun rights best, casting his vote in the Republican primary for former Ambassador Tom Foley. Foley, the endorsed gubernatorial contender, is facing a challenge from state Senate Minority Leader John McKinney.
The Democrats aren't seeing much of a turnout either, but didn't have solid numbers available.
Outside the Bristol Elks Club, former city Councilor Kate Matthews said she couldn't wait to get inside and vote for "the best darn choice for Democratic registrar of voters," her former council colleague, Kevin McCauley.
McCauley, who has the party's backing, is facing a primary against the incumbent, Mary Rydingsward.
Since Rydingsward has twice before beaten her party's chosen candidates for registrar, party officials are worried that McCauley might face a tough time.

Copyright 2014 All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

July 4, 2014

Republican registrar asked for website fix, but Rydingsward refused

The registrars website before it was changed late Thursday.
The city registrars office is providing some fireworks this Fourth of July. Here's some more information to flesh out what I posted yesterday about an allegation that Democratic Registrar Mary Rydingsward misused the city's website to promote her own candidacy in the Aug. 12 primary for registrar. These are email that went back and forth between the registrars in the hours before former city Councilor Kate Matthews complained about the issue:
Email from Republican Registrar Sharon Krawiecki to Democratic Registrar Mary Rydingsward at 12:09 p.m., Thursday, July 3:
Mary,
I respectively ask you again to either remove your name from the website or list every candidate running on the republican and democratic ballot.
Our office website should not be used to promote one candidate or party.
Please reply that you have done this within the hour.
Sharon
Reply at 12:21 p.m. from Rydingsward to Krawiecki:
Dear Sharon,
Please provide a list of the Republicans running in the format you desire and I will be happy to post.
~ Mary
Reply from Krawiecki to Rydingsward at 12:32 p.m.
Mary,
Since we have never posted candidate names in the past we should not start.
You stated that you thought because it was a document filed with the Town Clerk it belongs on the site. I remind you all candidate nominations are filed
Have you removed your name?
Sharon
Reply from Rydingsward to Krawiecki at 1:02 p.m.:
Sharon,
We should have a respectful conversation about this.  It is unfortunate that you brought it up as you were leaving this morning and did not have a respectful conversation with me. 
Let me correct your understanding of what I said.  I did not say "because it was a document filed with the town clerk it belongs on the website."  I simply explained to you - not knowing if you actually opened the link - that what is posted is a public document filed with the town clerk. 
Paul requested this posting to inform the public, especially in light of the fact that folks were inquiring.  Please contact him about it.
~ Thank you,
Mary

UPDATE AT 9:45 a.m. --
Krawiecki just told me the website was taken down at Mayor Ken Cockayne's direction late Thursday. He had received a copy of Matthews' email.

 Copyright 2014 All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

August 11, 2010

Tom Foley's victory speech in Rocky Hill last night

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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Malloy's victory speech last night




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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Primary voting results in Bristol

Here are the results in yesterday's primary. Turnout was an anemic 21 percent.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Brickley wins GOP congressional primary


ROCKY HILL – Republicans appear to have given the 1st District congressional primary nod to Wethersfield engineer Ann Brickley.
Though many results were not yet in, Brickley held at least a 10 point lead over challenger Mark Zydanowicz late Tuesday when the paper went to press.
With about half the precincts counted, including many in Zydanowicz strongholds, Brickley held what appears to be an insurmountable lead in the far-flung district, earning her the opportunity to take on U.S. Rep. John Larson in the November 2 general election.
Zydanowicz was not ready to throw in the towel, however.
“We’re still not sure,” the West Hartford dairy executive said from his home. “We’re still waiting to hear.”
At deadline, Brickley had yet to make an appearance before a crowd of about 100 supporters at the Rocky Hill Marriott, across the hall from a gathering for gubernatorial hopeful Tom Foley.
In Bristol, Zydanowicz garnered 649 votes to 632 for Brickley, but Bristol was considered by both sides in the primary fight to be heavily in Zydanowicz’s corner.
Larson, an East Hartford Democrat, has represented the 1st District since 1998. A Republican hasn’t won the district since 1956.
Brickley said she plans to break the half century streak of one party dominance in the district.
In talking points prepared for Brickley’s address, she thanked Zydanowicz and Joe Visconti, who lost out at the Republican convention, for running a clean campaign that avoided personal attacks.
She said in the prepared remarks that with rounds one and two behind her in the campaign, “I am ready for the main event.”
Brickley vowed to take it to Larson because “the problem with entrenched incumbents is they only talk to each other” and they don’t listen to constituents.
She said she’s had “enough of the rhetoric” and intends to force Larson to do a lot of explaining.
“I can’t wait to debate,” Brickley said. “I’ll debate him on his front porch if I have to.”
“We will be heard,” Brickley said, because “our government is broken and it’s time for all the residents in the 1st District to come together and send the message to Washington that we have had enough.”
Larson has a built-in advantage with more than 20 times as much campaign cash raised – so much that he’s given more away to other Democrats than the Republicans have any hope of raising themselves for the race.
The 1st District includes Bristol, Southington and Berlin. It is centered on Hartford.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

The Democratic establishment takes it on the chin

There's no way to view Mary Rydingsward's defeat of city Democratic Party leader Elliott Nelson except as a rebuke to the party establishment.
After all, the town committee overwhelmingly backed Nelson.
No doubt some of Rydingsward's support came from women who feel like outsiders dealing with the male-dominated party leadership team.
But there's also no doubt that some of those votes she racked up came from Democrats of both sexes who feel left out or shunned by party officials who are largely loyal to Mayor Art Ward.
Rydingsward worked hard in this campaign -- but so did Nelson. Both of them put in the effort that winning requires.
But when a Democratic Party chair loses a political race that only rank and file Democrats can participate in, the outcome is not just a referendum on the boss. It's about something more.
And that something may spell trouble for Ward, too, when it's his turn to run again next year.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

August 10, 2010

Watch primary returns live right here thanks to CT News Junkie

Free video chat by Ustream




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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Turnout lackluster for both parties

Turnout in today's primary is poor among both Republicans and Democrats.
As of noon, 10.2 percent of the city's registered Democrats had voted while 10 percent of GOP voters had turned out.
Those are the latest figures from the registrar's office.
PS: If anyone has photographs from the polls, send 'em to me and I'll post some. Use bristolpress@gmail.com to send the pictures as attachments. Thanks in advance.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

GOP congressional hopeful Mark Zydanowicz at Edgewood School today

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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Voter turnout is "very light" in Bristol


For all the money that’s poured into today’s primary campaign, voters appear largely uninterested.

As of noon today, only 9.9 percent of the eligible voters in the Republican and Democratic primaries had turned out to cast their ballots.
“It’s very light,” said Bob Badal, the city’s Democratic registrar.
At this pace, it’s unlikely that voter turnout will reach even 25 percent by the time the polls close at 8 p.m.
At the same time in last year’s mayoral election, where just 26 percent of the city’s 34,000 voters bothered to help pick the city leaders, 12 percent had voted as of noon.
In the hotly contested Democratic mayoral primary in 2007, nearly 10 percent of Democrats had voted by 10 a.m. – a much faster pace than today’s primary turnout.
Even so, only 28 percent of Democrats wound up voting in that primary, when Art Ward defeated Ellen Zoppo to claim his party’s line on the general election ballot.
At noon on Election Day in 2007, 14.9 percent of the city's registered voters had shown up to cast a ballot.
During the presidential race in 2008, 32 percent of registered voters in Bristol had trekked to the polls by noon.
At this point, the city registrar’s office can’t break down the turnout by party, but Badal said it appears that turnout is light for both Republicans and Democrats.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Primary Day! - Updated!

How are things at the polls today? Anyone encounter anything odd, funny or different? The machines all working the way they should? How's turnout?
I'll keep this thread updated with any news that I get.
Update at 9:15 a.m. - Turnout for the primary was 3.2 percent as of 9 a.m.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

August 9, 2010

McMahon coos at a Bristol baby




As part of a whirlwind tour across the state, Republican U.S. Senate hopeful Linda McMahon spent an hour Monday afternoon hobnobbing with GOP officials and diners at Panera Bread.
When McMahon walked in, she quickly spotted retired city Registrar Ellie Klapatch.
“We’re popping in” all over, McMahon said, as her eyes wandered to a 7-week-old baby boy held by former city GOP leader Gary Schaffrick.
She quickly scooped Evan Schilling, one of Bristol’s youngest residents, and quietly whispered some baby talk to him.
Handing him off after a couple of minutes, McMahon proclaimed, “That was my treat for the day.”
McMahon said she is “cautiously optimistic” about her chances in today’s three-way primary – former U.S. Rep. Rob Simmons and stock market guru Peter Schiff are running against her.
“I feel good momentum in this race,” McMahon said.
She apparently has one voted locked up already. Her husband, Vince McMahon, voted absentee because he’s in California this week.
The primary winner will face Democrat Richard Blumenthal, the state's longtime attorney general, in the November 2 general election for the open seat created by U.S. Sen. Chris Dodd’s decision to step down.
Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

The biggest primary in state history


Tuesday marks the biggest primary day in Connecticut’s history.
There are more candidates vying for more offices, including governor and U.S. Senate, than the state has ever had before.
“It’s unbelievable,” said retiring state Rep. Bill Hamzy, a Plymouth Republican. He called it “the most dramatic primary day that I can ever remember in Connecticut politics.”
“This is going to be one for the books,” said Whit Betts, the GOP candidate from Bristol who hopes to take Hamzy’s place in the state House.
Even so, city Democratic Party leader Elliott Nelson said he doubts more than 25 to 30 percent of the 13,238 registered Democrats in town will turn out to vote. Click here for the full story.

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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Tuesday's primary - Who's on the ballot in Bristol?



In Bristol, there is only one local primary – two Democrats are battling to become a registrar -- but the state’s trove of registered voters has attracted the attention of nearly every major candidate scrambling along the campaign trail.
Democrats face a number of tough choices in hard-fought races.
In the local showdown, city Democratic Party leader Elliott Nelson got his party’s endorsement to succeed Bob Badal as one of the city’s two registrars.
Mary Rydingsward challenged him because, she said, the office needs someone who wants to bring professionalism rather than patronage to the $47,000-a-year position.
But there are plenty of other races on the ballotl.
In addition to choosing a registrar, Democrats will also pick a gubernatorial candidate.
Former Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy and businessman Ned Lamont are locked in a tight race for the party’s backing.
For lieutenant governor, state Comptroller Nancy Wyman and Simsbury’s leader, Mary Glassman, are facing off. Wyman is Malloy’s running mate. Lamont picked Glassman.
For secretary of state, Democrats must choose between two state lawmakers: Denise Merrill and Gerry Garcia.
For comptroller, Kevin Lembo, the state’s health care advocate, is battling with Waterbury Mayor Michael Jarjura.
Republicans have a plethora of picks to make as well.
In the 1st congressional district, Wethersfield engineer and consultant Ann Brickley squares off against Mark Zydanowicz, a West Hartford dairy executive.
For governor, the GOP has to pick from among former Ambassador Tom Foley, Lt. Gov. Michael Fedele and Oz Griebel, the head of the MetroHartford Alliance.
Two Republicans are seeking the lieutenant governor’s post, entrepreneur Lisa Wilson-Foley and Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton.
In the U.S. Senate race, former World Wrestling Federation CEO Linda McMahon got the party’s endorsement in a bitter three-way contest. But two men, former U.S. Rep. Rob Simmons and broker Peter Schiff are challenging her.
In the attorney general’s race, Martha Dean, the endorsed candidate, is locked in a tough battle with Ross Garber. Both are lawyers.
For voters in Plymouth and some other neighboring towns that are not in the 1st congressional district, there is a 5th District GOP primary that pits Waterbury state Sen. Sam Caligiuri, the endorsed candidate, against Justin Bernier and Mark Greenberg.
The winner will take on U.S. Rep. Chris Murphy, a Cheshire Democrat who took office four years ago.
Polls are open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday. Only registered Republicans and Democrats can vote in their respective primaries. They will each have separate ballots to cast.

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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

February 6, 2008

Bristol sticks with its blue collar neighbors

Statewide voting patterns in Tuesday’s Democratic presidential primary almost mirror the results of the bitter 2006 party primary in which Ned Lamont nudged aside U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman for the party’s U.S. Senate nomination.
Central Connecticut’s blue collar towns, including Bristol and New Britain, backed Hillary Clinton’s presidential bid this time around just as they threw their support behind Lieberman two years ago.
But the larger cities and white collar suburbs put together enough votes to give Barack Obama the presidential primary win this week in the same way that they propelled Lamont to the U.S. Senate nomination.
Only six municipalities in Connecticut provided more votes to Clinton this week than Bristol did, all of them among the 10 cities and with larger populations than Bristol.
But 15 cities and town delivered more votes to Obama than Bristol, including smaller municipalities such as Greenwich, East Hartford, Fairfield, Windsor, Hamden and Middletown.
The biggest margin of victory for Clinton came in East Haven, where Democrats gave her 70 percent of the vote compared to just 28 percent for Obama.
Bloomfield and Cornwall both delivered more than 70 percent of the Democratic tally to Obama.
Clinton got her highest vote total in Stamford, where she picked up 6,094 votes.
Obama snagged 12,372 in New Haven. Hartford, Bridgeport and Stamford all gave more votes to Obama than Clinton got anywhere.

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Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

February 5, 2008

Obama, McCain win in Connecticut, according to CNN

Close race on the Dem side, not so close on the GOP side.

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Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

Hundreds turned away at the polls Tuesday

Hundreds of independent voters who sought to cast a ballot in the presidential primary Tuesday were turned away from the polls.
Though nobody kept a firm count, officials at three precincts – Stafford and Greene-Hills schools and the American Legion hall – collectively estimated they’d had to send away more than 200 voters.
If the city’s seven other voting districts had the same experience, there may have been more than 500 unaffiliated voters in Bristol who showed up to vote but didn’t get the chance.
At Greene-Hills, one fellow who couldn’t vote “got very upset,” according to Terry Parker, who helps run the polling place there.At the Legion hall on Hooker Court, officials estimated they had to say no to at least 125 independents who wanted to vote, nearly all of them expressing interest in casting a ballot in the Democratic primary.
A half dozen or more were angry enough to head for City Hall to doublecheck their registration cards.
Some thought they were registered as Democrats when they were actually independents. Others didn’t realize that Connecticut doesn’t allow unaffiliated voters to participate in party primaries, officials said.
Both Democratic Registrar Bob Badal and Jean Lombardo, the Democratic registrar in Plainville, said many unaffiliated voters are trying to vote in the Democratic primary.
But the law required anyone wishing to switch parties to make the change by noon Monday. It was too late Tuesday.
Lombardo said a number of Republicans were also saying they’d like to vote in the Democratic primary.
But they have to stick with the GOP, she said, at least until the November general election when everyone can vote for anyone they like.
City election officials said they had to make photocopies of some voters registration cards before they could convince them the computers hadn’t botched the registration information.
Some people at least were ready for the primary since hundreds in Bristol had switched their party status since November’s election.
Statewide, since the first of November, Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz said Tuesday that 16,500 unaffiliated voters changed their registration to Democrat and 6,300 unaffiliated voters made the switch to the Republican side.

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Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

"Impressive" turnout in Bristol for presidential showdown

In the largest turnout for a presidential primary in the city’s history, Bristol voters threw their support behind Republican John McCain and Democrat Hillary Clinton.
Over 40 percent of the 18,749 eligible voters in the city – Democrats and Republicans, but no independents – cast a ballot despite rainy, foggy weather Tuesday.
“That’s impressive,” said Art Mocabee, the city’s Republican Party chief.
In the hottest contest of the day in Democrat-dominated Bristol, Clinton grabbed 57 percent of the vote compared to Barack Obama’s 41 percent.
“That’s close in this town,” said Mayra Sampson, a former city Democratic chairwoman who backed Obama.
Standing in the mist outside Stafford School, Rick Centoni said he'd come to cast a vote for U.S. Sen. Hillary Clinton of New York."She's more qualified than anyone else," Centoni said.But, he said, he's impressed with Obama also and hopes that Clinton will tap him for her vice presidential running mate."They'd be a good ticket," Centoni said.At Greene-Hills School, Brian Brady said he's a registered Democrat, but never votes for them in the general election because the party isn't what it was.He said he voted for Clinton because he viewed her as the weaker candidate for the Democrats."I figured that would flip the burger to the cheesy side," he said, and perhaps help the GOP win in November.His wife, Kathy Brady, wasn't so calculating.She said she voted for Obama because "he represents change."
On the GOP side, McCain garnered 46 percent of the vote while Mitt Romney, his closest challenger, got 33 percent. Mike Huckabee snagged 11 percent.
"I'm happy," said Bristol city Councilor Mike Rimcoski, a McCain backer. "I think he'll lock it up tonight."
Registrars reported they were busy all day but had no problems at the polls aside from the number of independents who showed up hoping to vote.
City Clerk Therese Pac said she believes the turnout was higher than any previous presidential primary in Bristol.
But Terry Parker, an election official at Greene-Hills, said that municipal primaries sometimes attract more voters. A mayoral showdown in the 1970s between Frank Longo and Don Cassin drew a 57 percent turnout for a primary, he said.
Overall, there were 6,453 votes cast in the Democratic primary and 1,628 votes in the Republican primary. That means that a little less than half the Democrats in town voted Tuesday while only about a third of Republicans did.
The final tally indicates that McCain got 750 votes while Romney secured 547. Huckabee had 184 while Ron Paul collected 84.
On the Democratic side, Clinton rounded up 3,681 votes while Obama trailed with 2,588.
In both parties, a smattering of people voted for candidates who have dropped out or they picked uncommitted. The only other active candidate on the ballot, former Alaska Sen. Mike Gravel, got nine votes.

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Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com