Poll: Most Voters Say Rowland Should Resign
Poll: Most Voters Say Rowland Should Resign
 By Diane Scarponi
Associated Press
HARTFORD ââ Gov John G. Rowlandâs public support continues to erode following his admission that he lied about accepting gifts from employees and state contractors for his summer cottage in Litchfield, a Quinnipiac University poll showed Wednesday.
A majority of voters ââ 56 percent ââ told Quinnipiac pollsters that Mr Rowland should resign. Only 44 percent who thought he should resign in a poll released December 17, shortly after the governor first admitted he lied.
Forty-two percent of those polled think the legislature should try to impeach Rowland, Quinnipiac said. In a University of Connecticut poll last month, 22 percent of state residents favored immediate impeachment, while 75 percent wanted to wait for an investigation to finish.
âAs people learn more about the controversy, the tide of public opinion is turning against Rowland,â said Quinnipiac poll director Douglas Schwartz.
Senate President Pro Tem Kevin Sullivan said the poll results show that Mr Rowlandâs refusal to resign is out of touch with what the rest of the state wants.
Mr Rowland is not surprised at the poll results, said his spokesman and chief of staff, Dean Pagani.
âThe governor has been riding the crest of some very bad news over the past month,â Mr Pagani said. âItâs one of the reasons he wants to go on television tonight and speak directly to the people.â
Mr Rowland made a speech at 6 pm Wednesday to apologize to the public.
Mr Rowland has not done any of his own polling, Mr Pagani said.
âI donât think he needs to take a poll to know that people are upset,â he said.
Democrats who lead the House of Representatives planned to meet Thursday to discuss whether to start impeachment proceedings.
If Mr Rowland leaves office or is forced out, Lt Gov Jodi Rell would take over and Mr Sullivan would become lieutenant governor.
Seventy percent of those polled by Quinnipiac said they do not know enough about Ms Rell to form an opinion of her, but 48 percent said she is qualified to take over as governor.
The controversy erupted when Mr Rowland admitted he lied in a news conference about work that was done to his cottage on Bantam Lake in Litchfield. He originally said he paid for the renovation himself, then later admitted that some politically appointed state employees and a contractor, the Tomasso Group, had paid for some of it.
One of those who paid for work was Lawrence Alibozek, a former aide to his former chief of staff, Peter Ellef. Mr Alibozek has pleaded guilty to federal charges that he took bribes to steer state contracts.
Federal subpoenas seek information about Tomasso projects, including the juvenile detention facility in Middletown, a parking garage at Bradley International Airport, and other projects Tomasso built.
The poll found that only 13 percent of voters say Mr Rowland is honest and trustworthy, down from 18 percent in last monthâs poll. His job approval rating is 28 percent, similar to his rating in the December 17 poll.
The poll surveyed 1,006 registered voters by telephone between January 4 and 6. It has a sampling error margin of about three percentage points.