
Kevin Wyp
4.5K posts


@DemocraticWins Propaganda is not a country in Africa.
Fakers gotta Fake
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• Democrats in CT, via Gov. Lamont’s FY2027 “Connecticut Way” budget, approved significant union raises (~2.5% annual general wage increases + steps totaling ~4.5% for many state employees) and enhanced benefits, continuing prior contract patterns, alongside record education spending and universal free breakfast.
• CT schools rank high nationally with top per-pupil spending but show stagnant/declining outcomes since the 1990s.
• Universal breakfast justified by broad, self-reported “food insecurity” surveys despite visible luxuries. Creating child Dependency on the State, while Fostering laziness (not packing their own lunch).
• Programs criticized for fostering dependency; surveys seen as loose basis for policy/taxes.
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Great work! Hopefully FBI is opening the case.
Summary From Grok:
- **Lamont Self-Dealing Allegations (CT Gov. Ned & Annie Lamont)**
- **Sema4 Scandal**: No-bid COVID testing contracts (~$17M+ to OAK HC/FT-backed firm); OAK increased investment post-award; alleged $67M+ gains.
- **Private Server**: Official business (contracts, AdvanceCT, UConn funds) allegedly routed via family office email — potential FOIA evasion + recent deletions reported.
- **Offshore/Opacity**: Cayman structures, UConn Horsebarn Hill Fund ties, FOIA-exempt nonprofits (AdvanceCT), Saudi LP links.
- **Calls For**: Immediate FBI public corruption probe, forensic audits of server/records, full transparency on Annie’s separate finances.
Posted by citizen journalist Kristi Talmadge; RT’d by Tom Borelli (May 15, 2026). Based on reporting by Tony DeAngelo & Bob Swick. Ethics clearances previously issued; no charges filed.
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🚨 CONNECTICUT'S UNTOUCHABLE DEMOCRAT POWER COUPLE: The Lamonts’ Pattern of Self-Dealing Demands an Immediate FBI Investigation and Full Forensic Audits
For years, Connecticut taxpayers have watched in frustration as Governor Ned Lamont and his wife, Annie Lamont. co-founder and managing partner of the high-powered venture capital firm OAK HC/FT, appeared to blur the lines between public service and private profit.
While mainstream media briefly touched on isolated “potential conflicts” during the COVID-19 pandemic, independent journalists Tony DeAngelo (@TonyDeAngelo7) and Professor Bob Swick (@SwickSpeak) have relentlessly documented a deeper, more troubling pattern: no-bid state contracts funneled to OAK-backed companies, official business conducted on a private family office server, suspicious Cayman Islands offshore vehicles tied to university foundation money, and a network of FOI-exempt nonprofits that shielded decision-making from public view.
These are not ancient history. As recently as April and May 2026, DeAngelo has publicly detailed how the Lamonts allegedly began “scanning and deleting emails” on their family office server covering Sema4, AdvanceCT, Digital Currency Group (DCG), the UConn Foundation’s Horsebarn Hill Investment Fund, and more, right after his reporting broke.
Yet no subpoenas have flown. No forensic audit of the server has occurred. No legislative committee has demanded documents. The Connecticut GOP and legacy media have largely looked the other way. Enough is enough. The people of Connecticut deserve transparency, accountability, and, given the scale of potential public corruption, a full FBI investigation backed by independent forensic audits.
The Sema4 Scandal: No-Bid Contracts, Post-Contract Investments, and $67 Million+ in Alleged Gains
The clearest example remains the 2020 COVID-testing contracts awarded to Sema4 (later rebranded GeneDx), a Stamford-based genomics lab in which OAK HC/FT held a significant stake. State records show Sema4 received approximately $17.2 million in May 2020, followed by an $8.4 million no-bid add-on later that year, with contracts worth tens of millions overall when including prior and subsequent deals. OAK HC/FT had invested in Sema4 *before* the first major contract and, critically, *increased* its investment in July 2020, *after* the state deal was signed and as testing volume surged.
When Sema4 (now renamed GeneDX) went public in 2021, OAK’s stake was reportedly valued at over $66–67 million, according to SEC filings and DeAngelo’s analysis. The Lamonts pledged any family profits would go to charity and claimed none were realized (the stock later plummeted). The Office of State Ethics issued a formal clearance based on recusal and disclosure. But here’s what was never examined under oath: Did the no-bid awards and state imprimatur directly inflate Sema4’s valuation and reputation, benefiting OAK’s limited partners and the Lamont family’s broader wealth? DeAngelo has repeatedly noted the timing, the dollars, and the absence of competitive bidding, all while the governor’s office insisted it had “no role.”
This was not an isolated favor. Similar patterns appear with other OAK portfolio companies, including early investments in Digital Currency Group (which later received state relocation incentives) and questions around AI legislation in 2025 that critics say treated OAK-linked firms more favorably.
The Private “Family Office” Server: Official Business Hidden from FOIA and the Public
Even more alarming is the alleged use of a private Lamont family office server for state business. DeAngelo has reported, with specific references to COVID-era communications, that Ned and Annie Lamont routed discussions involving Sema4 contracts, AdvanceCT meetings, DCG, UConn Foundation investments, and CTInnovate through non-.gov accounts. Recent CT Insider reporting confirms the governor used personal email and phones for official matters, forwarding state emails privately and creating documented gaps in public records.
DeAngelo’s April 2026 reporting explicitly warned that the Lamonts had a “head start” on scanning and deleting relevant emails once the story surfaced. No independent forensic recovery has been attempted. Connecticut’s Freedom of Information Act is meaningless if the governor’s inner circle simply operates outside the official system. This is not a minor administrative slip. It is a potential obstruction of public oversight into how taxpayer dollars were awarded.
Cayman Islands, UConn’s Horsebarn Hill Fund, and Offshore Timing
Layer on the offshore dimension. Annie Lamont’s OAK HC/FT has documented Cayman Islands partnerships and structures. DeAngelo has highlighted the UConn Foundation’s massive “Horsebarn Hill Investment Fund” (a Cayman-based vehicle with an Ugland House address holding tens of millions) and its suspiciously timed investments aligning with Sema4’s IPO and OAK’s stake. Public university foundation money funneled through opaque offshore entities, potentially propping up companies that directly enriched the First Lady’s firm. No state auditor or legislative committee has demanded the full investment ledgers, timing charts, or limited-partner disclosures.
Add the Tidal River Network, a “philanthropic” women’s/minority VC initiative co-founded by Annie Lamont and a relative of former Gov. Malloy, and Saudi ties via Sanabil Investments as a limited partner in OAK funds. Each layer adds opacity and potential influence peddling.
AdvanceCT: The FOI-Exempt “Shadow Government” for Secret Deals
DeAngelo has described Advance_CT as the Lamonts’ preferred vehicle for routing COVID business and high-level meetings, conveniently exempt from FOIA. This nonprofit structure allegedly allowed self-dealing and contract steering while evading sunlight. Swick has repeatedly tied such nonprofits into a broader “nonprofit-industrial complex” enabling elite capture in Connecticut.
Why This Demands FBI Involvement and Forensic Audits — Now
Connecticut has seen other Lamont-era scandals, including FBI probes into former officials like Kosta Diamantis for alleged no-bid contract steering, school construction fraud, and the State Pier fiasco. Yet the Lamonts themselves have faced zero comparable scrutiny on the Sema4/OAK pattern. The Office of State Ethics offered an opinion, not an investigation. The governor’s office issues denials and recusal lists. Taxpayers are left with unexamined windfalls, deleted records, and offshore vehicles.
While Governor Ned Lamont publicly released his 2021 tax returns in October 2022, revealing an eye-popping $54 million in adjusted gross income, the vast majority from investment and capital gains, the public remains completely in the dark about First Lady Annie Lamont’s finances. Because the couple files separately (“Married Filing Separately”), Annie Lamont’s substantial earnings, distributions, and partnership income as co-founder and managing partner of OAK HC/FT Partners stay entirely shielded from disclosure. This convenient arrangement lets Ned project selective transparency while the full scope of the family’s wealth, and any potential profits tied to the very venture capital firm at the center of no-bid COVID contracts, offshore vehicles, and state-favor allegations, remains hidden from Connecticut taxpayers.
This is not “gotcha” politics. It is a systemic failure of accountability that erodes trust in government. Every Connecticut family struggling with high taxes, crumbling infrastructure, and post-COVID economic fallout has a right to know whether public dollars were steered to enrich the First Family’s venture capital empire.
The call is clear:
* The FBI’s New Haven field office and U.S. Attorney must open a public corruption probe into potential wire fraud, honest-services fraud, and conflicts involving state contracts, the private server, and offshore flows.
* The Connecticut State Auditor and Legislature must immediately subpoena the family server (or what remains), full OAK portfolio vs. state spending cross-checks, UConn Foundation investment records, and Advance_CT meeting logs.
* Forensic IT recovery experts should examine the private server for deletions and backups.
* All OAK HC/FT portfolio companies must be mapped against every state grant, loan, contract, or policy favor since 2019.
Governor Lamont and Annie Lamont have every right to defend themselves in public, under oath, with full documentation. But the era of “trust us, we recused” and “no profits realized” is over. Connecticut cannot afford another decade of elite impunity.
Taxpayers have funded enough. It is time for real sunlight and real consequences if the allegations hold. Contact your legislators, the Attorney General, and federal authorities today. Demand the FBI investigation and audits Connecticut deserves. The Lamont era of unaccountable power must end where every other public official’s does: at the rule of law.
@FBIDirectorKash @FBINewHaven @DAGToddBlanche @AAGDhillon


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Murphy typically has under 200 responses to his posts; Meager by today’s standards.
Very few are interested in his tired retort to concocted nonsense, perceived crises, and false villains.
Henny Penny audience is shrinking and he’s acting scared.
With all due respect, just Ignore him; and don’t respond. Otherwise we’ll be adding water to his garden of misery.
Without a proper interest here on X, he’ll continue to wither, and soon dry up like an old feeble weed in the hot Sun.
He has a future, as a director at one of the thousands of Homeless Shelters in CT, Or a handyman at a public housing facility.
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Murphy built his entire career around grift. It sounds like he is no longer in a position to take advantage and is pissed about it.
Chris Murphy 🟧@ChrisMurphyCT
This whole Administration is just one big grift. Everyone is encouraged to use their position to extort money from the corporations the Administration regulates. The result is simple: Trump officials profit. Corporations get favors. Regular people get screwed.
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The CT State Democrats, after concocting up a self-perceived crisis (no direct request from citizens ), Forcibly designed a housing accommodation (HB8002), without public opinion, for a select few, arguing the majority must give up its rights and property…
How is that Not the antithesis of freedom and democracy?
@TonyDeAngelo7
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The court covers up its partisanship as “non-partisan,” after allowing Republicans to cover up racial gerrymandering as “partisan.”
newsweek.com/the-supreme-co…
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Sen. Chris Murphy’s claim is not factual—it’s partisan rhetoric fueled by his deep disdain for President Trump.
The Connecticut Democrat has repeatedly slammed the war as Trump’s “epic disaster,” “illegal,” and “diplomatic malpractice,” arguing it achieved nothing while empowering Iran.
Iran suffered heavy blows—much of its missile arsenal (~50%), navy (>90% regular fleet sunk), air defenses (~80%), weapons factories (~90%), and leadership (including Supreme Leader Khamenei) destroyed. Yet it gained asymmetric Hormuz leverage (shipping at ~5% of pre-war levels). washingtonpost.com
Goals achieved: Partial military degradation (~50-90% key systems hit) and decapitation strikes succeeded; nuclear sites damaged but program not eliminated (limited impact); no regime change or proxy defeat.
Result: damaged but resilient Iran in a fragile stalemate.
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Here’s the short list, of companies that left because of Dems Policies, it is longer:
• General Electric (HQ from Fairfield to Boston, 2016)
• Aetna (HQ from Hartford to New York City, 2017)
• Alexion Pharmaceuticals (HQ from New Haven area to Boston, 2017)
• United Technologies / Raytheon (HQ from Farmington to Boston area post-merger, ~2019–2020)
• LEGO Group (U.S. HQ from Enfield to Boston, announced 2023)
• Edible Arrangements (HQ from Wallingford to Georgia, 2018)
• Carrier (HQ/ops shifts as part of UTC, to Florida ~2018–2019)
• Pepperidge Farm / Campbell Soup (HQ/operations in Norwalk closed/relocated, ~2023)
• Frontier Communications (HQ from Norwalk to Texas, 2023)
• Bristol-Myers Squibb (Closed Wallingford facility and fully exited Connecticut by end of 2018) nhregister.com
• Bayer (Closed West Haven research/manufacturing facility ~2006, ~1,000 jobs impacted) courant.com
• Stag Arms (from New Britain to Wyoming, 2019)
• PTR Industries (from Bristol to South Carolina, ~2013–2014)
• Remington Arms (major operations/relocations out of state)
• Winchester Repeating Arms (significant operations shifted/closed in New Haven area)
• Colt (partial shifts/threats of relocation)
• New Departure (GM) (major Bristol plant closed, 1990s)
• Pitney Bowes (noted operational shifts)
• Barnes Group (aerospace facilities closures in Bristol)
• Rheem / Eemax (Waterbury plant closure)
• Kimberly-Clark (New Milford plant closures/layoffs, ~2000s)
• Rogers Corporation (some ops relocated)
• International Paper (significant presence reduced)
• Xerox (major historical shifts)
• Clairol (operations reduced/impacted)
• Caldor (retail chain defunct/closed)
• Coleco (defunct, major former employer)
• Chemtura (operations changes)
• Stanley Black & Decker (manufacturing plant closures/shifts)
• Sikorsky / Lockheed Martin (notable job cuts/relocations)
• Sanofi (closed Meriden facility and exited CT, 2024) hartfordbusiness.com
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Everyone’s asking why I haven’t jumped into the fist fight between Erin and Ryan.
I’m running on my bold ideas and track record of getting results. The biggest scandal in this state is CT’s economic death spiral — 178,000 jobs produced in the US last month but only 100 in CT.
Erin’s offering a vague promise of “something different” and Ryan’s offering twenty percent off your utility bill and a $1,500 tax break. None of this will convince companies to move to CT.
I will AXE the state income TAX, bringing companies into the state. Don’t be distracted by the political infighting. GO BOLD with BETSY!
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Great point of debate, and you’ll Winnapaug that argument every time. But. He’s going to fluff it off by telling you how much $$$ and value he’s given his voters.
You’ll absolutely need to Win over (at least a marginal number of) the vote of State Workers, Unions, Healthcare Workers, welfare recipients, and urban communities. That’s a tall order.
Stump in the cities, and earn their vote
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They do not want to see me on a debate stage.
I will prosecute the case against the Lamont administration’s failed policies like no other candidate can. Connecticut’s electric bills are the 2nd-highest in the country and have only risen under Ned Lamont. We must nominate a candidate who can and will attack the big issues head-on and begin solving our state’s energy crisis on day one.
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@gov_ct @CoachNickerson @NedLamont @CTDems @LGSusanB @Betsy_McCaughey @ryanfazio Couldn’t be more Obvious
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@CoachNickerson @NedLamont Ten years in a row 🤦♀️🤬
Are the $1.3 Billion a year spent on ILLEGALS, is it a vote buying scam?
@CTDems
@LGSusanB
@Betsy_McCaughey
@ryanfazio

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We will continue to protect Connecticut’s workers the people who keep our state moving by ensuring strong job protections, fair pay, and a level playing field for every business. #TeamLamont #NedforCT
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What about these businesses? Any explanation?
They joined the long list at the Club of Obvious Outcome, cutting their ties to the reigning Kingdom of Lamont:
• General Electric (HQ from Fairfield to Boston, 2016)
• Aetna (HQ from Hartford to New York City, 2017)
• Alexion Pharmaceuticals (HQ from New Haven area to Boston, 2017)
• United Technologies / Raytheon (HQ from Farmington to Boston area post-merger, ~2019–2020)
• LEGO Group (U.S. HQ from Enfield to Boston, announced 2023)
• Edible Arrangements (HQ from Wallingford to Georgia, 2018)
• Carrier (HQ/ops shifts as part of UTC, to Florida ~2018–2019)
• Pepperidge Farm / Campbell Soup (HQ/operations in Norwalk closed/relocated, ~2023)
• Frontier Communications (HQ from Norwalk to Texas, 2023)
• Bristol-Myers Squibb (Closed Wallingford facility and fully exited Connecticut by end of 2018) nhregister.com
• Bayer (Closed West Haven research/manufacturing facility ~2006, ~1,000 jobs impacted) courant.com
• Stag Arms (from New Britain to Wyoming, 2019)
• PTR Industries (from Bristol to South Carolina, ~2013–2014)
• Remington Arms (major operations/relocations out of state)
• Winchester Repeating Arms (significant operations shifted/closed in New Haven area)
• Colt (partial shifts/threats of relocation)
• New Departure (GM) (major Bristol plant closed, 1990s)
• Pitney Bowes (noted operational shifts)
• Barnes Group (aerospace facilities closures in Bristol)
• Rheem / Eemax (Waterbury plant closure)
• Kimberly-Clark (New Milford plant closures/layoffs, ~2000s)
• Rogers Corporation (some ops relocated)
• International Paper (significant presence reduced)
• Xerox (major historical shifts)
• Clairol (operations reduced/impacted)
• Caldor (retail chain defunct/closed)
• Coleco (defunct, major former employer)
• Chemtura (operations changes)
• Stanley Black & Decker (manufacturing plant closures/shifts)
• Sikorsky / Lockheed Martin (notable job cuts/relocations)
• Sanofi (closed Meriden facility and exited CT, 2024) hartfordbusiness.com
This focuses on confirmed major exits or closures with significant job impacts. Connecticut has seen hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs lost overall due to a mix of relocations, offshoring, and other factors.
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@CoachNickerson @NedLamont Based on the CT industry productivity is stable and in some cases increasing. You can argue CT industry is one sided (defense contractors) that relies on federal contracts to fund the CT economy. But, even Pratt & Whitney, Sikorsky, Electric Boat are initiating more AI, robots.
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You mean Like this, your highness:
How long before they join the long list at the Club of Obvious Outcome, cutting the ties to the reigning Kingdom of Lamont:
• General Electric (HQ from Fairfield to Boston, 2016)
• Aetna (HQ from Hartford to New York City, 2017)
• Alexion Pharmaceuticals (HQ from New Haven area to Boston, 2017)
• United Technologies / Raytheon (HQ from Farmington to Boston area post-merger, ~2019–2020)
• LEGO Group (U.S. HQ from Enfield to Boston, announced 2023)
• Edible Arrangements (HQ from Wallingford to Georgia, 2018)
• Carrier (HQ/ops shifts as part of UTC, to Florida ~2018–2019)
• Pepperidge Farm / Campbell Soup (HQ/operations in Norwalk closed/relocated, ~2023)
• Frontier Communications (HQ from Norwalk to Texas, 2023)
• Bristol-Myers Squibb (Closed Wallingford facility and fully exited Connecticut by end of 2018) nhregister.com
• Bayer (Closed West Haven research/manufacturing facility ~2006, ~1,000 jobs impacted) courant.com
• Stag Arms (from New Britain to Wyoming, 2019)
• PTR Industries (from Bristol to South Carolina, ~2013–2014)
• Remington Arms (major operations/relocations out of state)
• Winchester Repeating Arms (significant operations shifted/closed in New Haven area)
• Colt (partial shifts/threats of relocation)
• New Departure (GM) (major Bristol plant closed, 1990s)
• Pitney Bowes (noted operational shifts)
• Barnes Group (aerospace facilities closures in Bristol)
• Rheem / Eemax (Waterbury plant closure)
• Kimberly-Clark (New Milford plant closures/layoffs, ~2000s)
• Rogers Corporation (some ops relocated)
• International Paper (significant presence reduced)
• Xerox (major historical shifts)
• Clairol (operations reduced/impacted)
• Caldor (retail chain defunct/closed)
• Coleco (defunct, major former employer)
• Chemtura (operations changes)
• Stanley Black & Decker (manufacturing plant closures/shifts)
• Sikorsky / Lockheed Martin (notable job cuts/relocations)
• Sanofi (closed Meriden facility and exited CT, 2024) hartfordbusiness.com
This focuses on confirmed major exits or closures with significant job impacts. Connecticut has seen hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs lost overall due to a mix of relocations, offshoring, and other factors.
@CTMirror @FoxNews
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@CoachNickerson :
Look at his face.
Psychological deduction: Calculated deflection with mild contempt.
Murphy maintains steady eye contact and composed posture, but shows:
• Frequent subtle head tilts + eyebrow raises (signaling superiority/dismissal of the tax idea).
• Tight-lipped pauses and slight smirks when pivoting to “end the war.”
• Minimal genuine smiles; more micro-expressions of frustration/annoyance (furrowed brow, quick blinks).
This reads as rehearsed political framing—prioritizing narrative control and subtle Trump critique over direct empathy for gas-price pain. Classic avoidance + moral posturing.
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The choice to help the American people or Iran…the village idiot chooses Iran
🤷🏻♂️
Kaitlan Collins@kaitlancollins
Sen. Chris Murphy on why he won't vote for suspending the federal gas tax, which President Trump backed today. "The quickest way to get gas prices down is to end this war."
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@kaitlancollins :
Look at his face.
Psychological deduction: Calculated deflection with mild contempt.
Murphy maintains steady eye contact and composed posture, but shows:
• Frequent subtle head tilts + eyebrow raises (signaling superiority/dismissal of the tax idea).
• Tight-lipped pauses and slight smirks when pivoting to “end the war.”
• Minimal genuine smiles; more micro-expressions of frustration/annoyance (furrowed brow, quick blinks).
This reads as rehearsed political framing—prioritizing narrative control and subtle Trump critique over direct empathy for gas-price pain. Classic avoidance + moral posturing.
English

They joined the long list at the Club of Obvious Outcome, cutting the ties to the reigning Kingdom of Lamont:
• General Electric (HQ from Fairfield to Boston, 2016)
• Aetna (HQ from Hartford to New York City, 2017)
• Alexion Pharmaceuticals (HQ from New Haven area to Boston, 2017)
• United Technologies / Raytheon (HQ from Farmington to Boston area post-merger, ~2019–2020)
• LEGO Group (U.S. HQ from Enfield to Boston, announced 2023)
• Edible Arrangements (HQ from Wallingford to Georgia, 2018)
• Carrier (HQ/ops shifts as part of UTC, to Florida ~2018–2019)
• Pepperidge Farm / Campbell Soup (HQ/operations in Norwalk closed/relocated, ~2023)
• Frontier Communications (HQ from Norwalk to Texas, 2023)
• Bristol-Myers Squibb (Closed Wallingford facility and fully exited Connecticut by end of 2018) nhregister.com
• Bayer (Closed West Haven research/manufacturing facility ~2006, ~1,000 jobs impacted) courant.com
• Stag Arms (from New Britain to Wyoming, 2019)
• PTR Industries (from Bristol to South Carolina, ~2013–2014)
• Remington Arms (major operations/relocations out of state)
• Winchester Repeating Arms (significant operations shifted/closed in New Haven area)
• Colt (partial shifts/threats of relocation)
• New Departure (GM) (major Bristol plant closed, 1990s)
• Pitney Bowes (noted operational shifts)
• Barnes Group (aerospace facilities closures in Bristol)
• Rheem / Eemax (Waterbury plant closure)
• Kimberly-Clark (New Milford plant closures/layoffs, ~2000s)
• Rogers Corporation (some ops relocated)
• International Paper (significant presence reduced)
• Xerox (major historical shifts)
• Clairol (operations reduced/impacted)
• Caldor (retail chain defunct/closed)
• Coleco (defunct, major former employer)
• Chemtura (operations changes)
• Stanley Black & Decker (manufacturing plant closures/shifts)
• Sikorsky / Lockheed Martin (notable job cuts/relocations)
• Sanofi (closed Meriden facility and exited CT, 2024) hartfordbusiness.com
This focuses on confirmed major exits or closures with significant job impacts. Connecticut has seen hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs lost overall due to a mix of relocations, offshoring, and other factors.
@ryanfazio @CTGOP
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@GovNedLamont :
The Supermajority that stays in power, despite our opposition, and counter voting, is Imposing duties (e.g., CT’s new PA 26-12 mandates on wages, retention, transparency) lets government compel actions and micromanage employers far beyond simple prohibitions.
It is not promoting individual freedoms, nor strictly prohibiting bad behavior.
• Many employers left CT to escape expanding state control via taxes, mandates & regulations.
• GE, Aetna, Alexion, Carrier, LEGO, Duracell & others cited high taxes, regulatory burden, labor mandates & poor business climate.
• They voted with their feet against “mandates dressed as laws.”
• Result: lost jobs, shrinking tax base, weakened private sector.
You and Malloy have wrecked our beautiful State. So sad….
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King Lamont:
Imposing duties (e.g., CT’s new PA 26-12 mandates on wages, retention, transparency) lets government compel actions and micromanage employers far beyond simple prohibitions, which should be the prerequisite to any Law.
• Many employers left CT to escape expanding state control via taxes, mandates & regulations.
• GE, Aetna, Alexion, Carrier, LEGO, Duracell & others cited high taxes, regulatory burden, labor mandates & poor business climate.
• They voted with their feet against “mandates dressed as laws.”
• Result: lost jobs, shrinking tax base, weakened private sector.
@CTCentinal @CTMirror @TonyDeAngelo7 @ryanfazio @JonathanDeBar78
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@SelinaThePagan @WTNH It’s fact, and you’re absolutely right.
If you’re going to do something, Now is the time
The Dems continue to destroy the State, with, or without conservatives on the taxpayer rolls….
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Saying his party has three strong candidates for Connecticut governor, Ben Proto makes the case to Dennis House on This Week in Connecticut that the GOP can beat Democrat Gov. Ned Lamont in November. wtnh.com/on-air/thiswee…
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