Politics & Government

Newtown Election 2016: What You Need to Know

Before you head into the voting booth on Election Day here's information on all the candidates, polling places and more.

NEWTOWN, CT — Newtown residents will head to the polls on Nov. 8 for the 2016 midterm election. Polling places will be open from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. On the ballot, registered voters will be able to select candidates for president and vice president, United States senator, representatives to U.S. Congress, state senator, state representative, and registrar of voters.

In Newtown, the choice for State Representative for the 2nd District is between Democratic candidate Raghib Allie-Brennan and Republican candidate Will Duff.

If elected, Duff a fourth generation lifelong Bethel resident, said he will work to "eliminate tax on Social Security income to help seniors struggling with high cost of living, grow our economy by working with employers, not targeting them, restore state funding cuts to our school, stop shifting crippling state deficits to towns, which only drive local tax hikes higher," and more.

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If elected, Allie-Brennan said, "There are five issues that I want to focus on during this campaign and as state representative: economic development, reinvesting in our transportation infrastructure, supporting a renewable energy future, tackling the opioid crisis and making education a priority."

LeReine Frampton, Democratic and Carey Schierloh, Republican, are the candidates for registrar of voters.

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The State Senator candidates are Philip Dwyer, Democrat, and Tony Hwang, Republican. Dwyer said the issues he will fight for are education, job creation, transportation and gun control. "Despite the advancements we have made, gun related crime continues to affect minorities and low socioeconomic communities in our inner-cities at disproportionate rates. Gun law reform is an issue that has received bipartisan support in Connecticut and should continue to be aggressively pushed forward in Hartford," Dwyer said.

Hwang's focus is on taxes, the economy and social responsibility. "Economic uncertainty, high governmental costs and restrictive regulatory bureaucracy are tremendous barriers to the creation of private sector jobs. Unfortunately, these factors are what employers and small businesses in our state struggle with every day," he said.

Sharon Wicks Dornfeld, a Democrat, is running against Daniel O'Grady, Republican, for Probate Judge. Dornfeld said she has practiced law in Danbury, "with a focus on representing children and the elderly," since 1983.

O'Grady said he has "extensive legal experience in my 30 years as an attorney. I have litigated hundreds of cases before the Connecticut Supreme Court, the Connecticut appellate court and Superior Court.
For United States Congress in the 5th District, the choice is between Incumbent Elizabeth Esty, a Democrat and Clay Cope, a Republican First Selectman for Sherman.

Cope said if elected to Congress he plans to "focus on the fundamentals of a fiscally conservative platform: a balanced Federal Budget, and lower Federal taxes and spending – along with meaningful Immigration Reform, effective border security, and improved National Security."

Esty said "job creation and economic development is a top priority for the residents of the 5th District."
For United States Senate the candidates are Richard Blumenthal, Democrat, Dan Carter, Republican, Richard Lion, Libertarian, and Jeffrey Russell, Green Party.

Carter is an officer and pilot is a graduate of Bowling Green University where he earned a bachelor’s degree in political science and was a member of the Air Force ROTC program. He is serving the 2nd District in his third two-year term. He is the Ranking Member (Republican Leader) on the legislature’s General Law Committee, and member of the Education and Finance, Revenue & Bonding committees.

Blumenthal is serving his first term as a United States Senator for Connecticut and served five terms as Connecticut’s Attorney General.

The candidates for president and vice president are Republicans Donald Trump and Mike Pence, Democrats Hillary Clinton and Tim Kaine, Libertarians Gary Johnson and Bill Weld, and Green Party Jill Stein and Ajamu Baraka.

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