Connecticut election officials Wednesday announced the state’s general election results have formally been certified. “Although the election ended for most voters on November 5th, this certification is another step in the process of finalizing an election,
All but one of the seven U.S. House and Senate Democrats from Connecticut, including the ranking member of the House Intelligence Committee, said Thursday they were the targets of bomb threats. Why it matters: The development comes after a spate of bomb and "swatting" threats against President-elect Trump's nominees earlier this week – none of which were found to be credible.
All five House Democrats from Connecticut and one of the state's two Democratic Senators reported receiving bomb threats the morning of Thanksgiving Day.
A CT Insider report on apparent data errors in certified election results in Connecticut sparked calls for reform this week.
Here’s what to know about the next steps lawmakers could take and how no-excuse absentee voting could change voting in Connecticut.
"I used to date, and you'd look across the table at the guy and you'd think, 'Okay, I wonder if we're gonna end up in bed together,' and now I look across the table and I just think: when am I gonna have to change this guy's diapers?" Hatcher joked
After Connecticut approves expansion of absentee voting, lawmakers say all-mail elections are still a ways off, for now.
Following the recent election results, many LGBTQ+ people are feeling frightened and uncertain about the future. A rally in support of the community is planned on Sunday at Blue Back Square in West Hartford and is expected to attract hundreds from around Connecticut and beyond.
The election may be over, but now there is finally a winner in Connecticut’s 8th Senate district. A recount has been underway between Republican Incumbent Lisa Seminara and Democrat Paul Honig, with Honig has been declared the winner.
At least four Democratic representatives from Connecticut said Thursday they were targeted with bomb threats while home celebrating Thanksgiving with their families.
Appointees to the State Board of Education usually sail through the confirmation process in Connecticut’s House of Representatives, but a 2009 choice, Linda McMahon, drew intense pushback. Andrew Fleischmann,
The choice of state chair is technically up to a vote of the Democratic State Central Committee, but the committee typically defers to the choice of a governor when Democrats hold the office.