The Democrats’ lurch to the extreme left is accelerating at warp speed – and Connecticut is the latest victim.
The state legislature’s Democratic supermajority last week rammed through a bill, HB 8002, that’s a thinly disguised socialist wishlist.
Cynically couched as a remedy for the affordable housing crisis, its real purpose is ideological: forcing Connecticut’s 169 towns to achieve what the bill calls “economic diversity.”
Translation: If you’ve worked hard to own a home in a leafy suburb with quiet streets, you can’t live there unless everybody can – including the homeless and those with low incomes.
The state, through regional councils, will dictate how many people at each income level a town must house.
The councils are mere middlemen, a cosmetic addition to paper over a fundamental loss of local control.
This isn’t about allowing one apartment building in a town of single-family homes; up to 20% of a town’s housing will have to be “affordable” rentals.
The bill even forces towns to let the homeless sleep in local parks or camp on sidewalks, despite the risk of crime and disorder. Public safety be damned.
Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont, seeking a third term in 2026 and fearing a challenge on his left flank, called the legislature into special session to pass this bill – and it did at 1 a.m. Friday, with zero Republican votes.
GOP state Sen. Rob Sampson, who called the measure “very coercive,” warned that towns will soon “look like what the state of Connecticut decides,” losing their local character.
Republicans predicted it would push up the state’s property taxes, already among the nation’s highest.
To accommodate new apartment buildings, towns with mostly single-family housing will get clobbered with huge costs to install sewers and water lines, and to add transportation and school capacity.
Homeownership will actually get more out of reach.
If Democrats were honestly concerned with improving affordability, they’d seek to add rentals where they’re most needed – in cities like Hartford, Bridgeport, and New Haven, where the infrastructure for housing density already exists.
Connecticut’s extreme bill is strikingly different from the housing efforts other states and cities have launched.
Eighteen states and New York City’s own “City of Yes” program are permitting basement apartments and backyard cottages.
Montana is allowing conversions of commercial space, like vacant malls, into apartment complexes and easing parking requirements to one space per rental unit.
Texas reduced lot-size requirements but only for new residential tracts, not existing neighborhoods.
In contrast, Connecticut’s bill affects every town and eliminates parking requirements entirely for many buildings – a looming nightmare for small towns with narrow residential streets.
Democrats are giving a middle finger to locals who value their villages’ traditional New England charm.
Towns that don’t comply face draconian penalties – losing any right to appeal when developers arrive with affordable housing plans of their own.
During the Senate proceedings, Democratic Majority Leader Bob Duff sneered at Republicans’ objections, instructing his members to vote against every GOP amendment without debate.
But Duff and the Democrats don’t seem to understand the issues at hand.
When Sampson challenged a provision outlawing “hostile architecture” – public seating with dividers and armrests, meant to keep homeless people from sleeping on them – Duff answered that it is intended to facilitate sleeping in the rough. That’s the result of a housing shortage.
No, Sampson replied, “People are not homeless because there are no rents available”; mental illness and drug addiction are the major causes.
Sampson nailed it. The new law will bring chaos to peaceful streets.
Forget allowing your teens to walk around town alone.
Yet the Democrats’ housing bill imagines these people will peacefully settle into newly constructed apartment units throughout the state.
It’s la-la land thinking. And dangerous.
A formerly homeless tenant mainstreamed into an apartment is likely to harass and assault other tenants, set fires, or even cede the space to drug dealers or other criminals, according to homeless expert Stephen Eide of the Manhattan Institute.
Last week, President Donald Trump informed the homeless advocacy industrial complex that to get federal money, they must abandon the “Housing First” approach that fails to treat the addictions and illnesses that drive homelessness in the first place.
Whether you like Trump or not, he’s right on this one.
Yet Lamont and his lefty allies, just like New York City Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani, vow not to remove the homeless from the streets or commit them to mental health or drug treatment against their will.
It’s sheer lunacy – and so is Connecticut’s top-down housing bill.
When Lamont signs it into law, as he has vowed to do, he will sabotage his state, damaging its towns irreversibly.
The need for affordable housing is urgent, but this is no way to meet it.
Betsy McCaughey is a former Lt. Governor of New York State and Chairman & Founder of the Committee to Reduce Infection Deaths. Follow her on Twitter @Betsy_McCaughey.
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Will the owners of huge homes with only two or three occupants be forced to take in renters? if yes than all the politicians and celebrities better start airing all those empty bedrooms.I wonder how many will Hillary or Obamas accommodate. Or Bernie and Warren those 2 fighters for equality. They only can be at one house at the time, perhaps the empty ones can be rented out at an affordable price. Lead by example, not spit on the chin.
Dear Young People. This a warning to you “I’m from the government, I’m here to Help.”
Wow he really doesn’t care about his town, sorry for all who live there.
Sad day for the existing home owners
Coming to a blue state near you. I can’t wait for WA to adopt this, they’ve ruined everything else.
For some stange reasons democrats in-box thinking have lost complete sense of making the right decisions. I don’t think these democrats know how to make right choices for the many only for themselves.
this DEI in a differant form,or socialism
Maybe the smaller towns should refund the articles that created their townships and secede back to the county government.
There are many vacant properties in my city. My suggestion is that these beautiful old homes be renovated and used as apartments for low income families and residents. There’s no need to build new apartments until All abandoned buildings are renovated. In short, recycle the existing buildings.
No sympathy here. It’s what the Connecticut Liberals voted for.