Current:Home > MarketsBridgeport mayor says supporters broke law by mishandling ballots but he had nothing to do with it -Momentum Wealth Path
Bridgeport mayor says supporters broke law by mishandling ballots but he had nothing to do with it
View
Date:2025-04-14 01:03:34
The mayor of Connecticut’s largest city said Tuesday that he believes his supporters broke the law while handling absentee ballots and he doesn’t plan on appealing a judge’s decision to toss out the results of a Democratic primary and possibly rerun the general election.
Speaking in a radio interview, Bridgeport Mayor Joe Ganim denied having anything to do with rule-breaking during the Sept. 12 primary, in which some backers of his campaign were recorded on surveillance videos stuffing multiple absentee ballots into outdoor collection boxes.
“I’m embarrassed and I’m sorry for what happened with the campaign. Granted, I had no knowledge of what was going on,” Ganim said on the Lisa Wexler Show on WICC 600AM. He acknowledged that “there were people in the campaign that violated, you know, the election laws, as the judge clearly saw from the evidence.”
Ganim called on state elections officials to do more to curb potential absentee ballot abuse. He also claimed that the violations captured on the video weren’t unique to his campaign, and he urged his election opponent, John Gomes, to admit that similar issues occurred among his supporters.
“If we’re going to come clean, we need to come clean,” Ganim said. “And that means Gomes has to come clean.”
Bridgeport’s mayoral election was thrown into chaos shortly after Ganim appeared to have beaten Gomes, a former member of his administration, by a small margin in the Democratic primary.
Gomes then released recordings taken by city surveillance cameras that showed people stuffing reams of absentee ballots into collection boxes in apparent violation of Connecticut law, which requires people to deposit their ballots themselves in most circumstances.
A judge later ruled that the videos and other testimony were evidence of ballot “harvesting,” a banned practice in which campaign volunteers visit people, persuade them to vote by absentee ballot, collect those ballots and and submit them.
The judge ordered a new primary, scheduled for Jan. 23, and a new general election would be held Feb. 22 if needed.
Despite the judge’s ruling, the general election for mayor was still held on Nov. 7, even though it ultimately didn’t count. Ganim wound up getting more votes than Gomes.
Ganim, who served seven years in prison for corruption during his first run as Bridgeport’s mayor and won the job back after his release, has pointed to other surveillance videos that raised questions about whether other people were engaging in ballot harvesting.
Gomes, however, has denied any such effort on his behalf.
“The Democratic Town Committee, the machine operatives, were caught doing this. It was not the Gomes campaign,” his campaign manager, Christine Bartlett-Josie, said in an interview. “The Democratic Town Committee has created a culture, that this is the way in which they operate. And that was to benefit the current administration and the current elected. That’s it.”
The State Elections Enforcement Commission is investigating multiple allegations of improprieties.
veryGood! (428)
Related
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Triathlon
- Andy Reid is due for a serious pay bump after Chiefs' Super Bowl win
- With Western military aid increasingly uncertain, Ukraine builds its own weapons
- P.F. Chang's will give free Valentine's dumplings to those dumped over a text message
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Jimmy Kimmel gets help from Ryan Gosling's Ken, Weird Barbie in road to 'Oscarsland'
- 'The Dynasty' Apple TV docuseries goes behind scenes of New England Patriots' six Super Bowls
- Wisconsin Assembly to consider eliminating work permit requirement for 14- and 15-year-olds
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Grover the Muppet becomes a journalist, shining a light on the plight of the industry
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Inflation ran hotter than expected in January, complicating the Fed's rate decision
- Democrats seek to strengthen majority in Pennsylvania House as voters cast ballots
- 49ers offseason outlook: What will free agency, NFL draft hold for Super Bowl contender?
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Wisconsin Assembly to consider eliminating work permit requirement for 14- and 15-year-olds
- Bluey launches YouTube reading series with celebrity guests from Bindi Irwin to Eva Mendes
- 'Honey I'm home': Blake Lively responds after Ryan Reynolds jokes, 'Has anyone seen my wife?'
Recommendation
The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
A judge has blocked enforcement of an Ohio law limiting kids’ use of social media amid litigation
Accident investigators push the FAA for better cockpit voice recorders on all planes
The wife of a man charged with killing his 5-year-old daughter says she still cares about him
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Tony Romo's singing, meandering Super Bowl broadcast left us wanting ... less
May December star Charles Melton on family and fame
The end of school closings? New York City used online learning, not a snow day. It didn’t go well