An
Orderly and Decent Government
The
Connecticut General Assembly is one of longest continually
active legislative bodies in the history of the world. This
is its story.
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For
almost four hundred years, Connecticut legislators have sought
"the common good." But the agenda of the legislature
has always been set by changes in the world around it. Wars,
shifts in the economy, political victories and other
significant events and developments have constantly
reshaped life in Connecticut and
challenged
the legislature to redefine the common good. To Thomas Hooker
and Connecticut's founders, the common good meant enforced
religious conformity. To 19th century legislators, it meant
unhindered economic growth; by the 1930's, the common good
meant massive public assistance for
victims of the Great Depression.
From
the very first, Connecticut's search
for the common good rested on the idea of representation.
While today we
take
for granted that each adult should have an equal vote, very
different notions prevailed for much of our history. We've
always felt that legislators should represent the will of
the people. But who selects these officials and whether they
should reflect the whole society they serve has been debated
for most of the span of Connecticut's representative form
of government.
Since
its very beginning, the legislature itself has changed enormously
in the way it conducts its business and in the resources at
its disposal to do the people's work more effectively. These
transformations, too, are part of the story of representative
government in Connecticut.
The
General Assembly's continuing challenge has been making
self-government work. The simple society of Connecticut's
founders has long since disappeared, but still with us after
all these years is the conviction that we can govern ourselves
successfully.
That
commitment to representative government runs like a straight
line throughout our history, connecting us directly to those
visionaries who first placed their faith in the people almost
four centuries ago.