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Significant Events and DevelopmentsSearching for the Common GoodMaking Self-Government Work
A New Constitution


1965
General Assembly calls a Constitutional Convention

1969
Governor Dempsey vetoes Legislative Management Act

1970
Constitutional amendment mandates annual legislative sessions

1974
Horton v. Meskill

1983
Mianus River Bridge collapse

1984
Mashantucket Pequots gain federal recognition

1988
Legislative Office Building dedicated

1989
Sheff v. O'Neill

1991
State income tax passed Constitutional amendment caps state spending

1996
General Assembly approves $1 billion in support for the University of Connecticut

 

Significant Events
& Developments,
1965-Now
Click on images for larger version

   

1. President Lyndon Johnson campaigning in Connecticut in 1964
   

A New Constitution

President Johnson declared war on poverty following his election in 1964, and federal funds soon flowed into urban renewal and anti-poverty programs across the state. Picture 1

Spurred by civil rights struggles in the South, federal courts began enforcing the Constitutional principle of "one man-one vote" or equal representation. Representing reformers long dissatisfied with Connecticut's unbalanced and often paralyzed political process, the League of Women Voters sued the state in federal court. The court found Connecticut's system grossly unfair and ordered the legislature to reapportion the House and Senate. Picture 2

Under court order, legislative elections were cancelled until Connecticut recast its Constitution. Republicans and Democrats each sent 42 delegates to the Convention, which was chaired by former governor and Supreme Court Justice Raymond Baldwin. Picture 3

The party chairmen played a crucial role behind the scenes at the Convention. Placing statesmanship above partisan competition, they met frequently to develop the agreements that ensured success and joined forces to support the campaign for ratification by the voters. Picture 4

"Reapportionment's effect on the small towns of the state is somewhat akin to a fly swatter's effect on flies - sudden, traumatic and final."

Representative Benjamin Barringer of New Milford

Deep cuts in defense spending after the end of the Cold War sent Connecticut's economy into recession and challenged the General Assembly on several fronts. Demands for increased social services for laid-off workers and others affected by the economic hard times collided with decreased state revenues. Picture 5

In 1989, lawyers for an interracial group of urban and suburban children brought suit against the state. In Sheff v. O'Neill, they argued that racial segregation in the Hartford region violated their constitutional guarantee of an equal education. The courts agreed and ordered the General Assembly to create plans for achieving equal educational opportunity. Picture 6

 

         
   

2. Hartford Courant headline regarding Supreme Court decision
   
         
   

3. Delegates at the Constitutional Convention of 1965
   
         
   

4. Party chairmen: Republican A. Searle Pinney and Democrat John Bailey, 1965
   
         
   

5. Germans atop the Berlin Wall celebrate the opening of East-West German borders, 1989
   
         
   

6. Scheff plaintiffs at a picnic
   
             
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