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M. Jodi Rell

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Connecticut welcome sign being fixed as Rell takes office on July 1, 2004
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Connecticut welcome sign being fixed as Rell takes office on July 1, 2004
M. Jodi Rell (born June 16, 1946) is a Republican politician who became the 87th Governor of Connecticut on July 1, 2004. She had been the Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut until Governor John G. Rowland resigned during a corruption investigation.  Rell is Connecticut's second female Governor.

Born Mary Carolyn Reavis [FORMER ODU STUDENT NAMED CONN. GOVERNOR. (2004, June 22)] Old Dominion University News in Norfolk, Virginia, Rell attended Old Dominion University, but left in 1967 to marry Lou Rell, a US Navy pilot. She moved to Brookfield, Connecticut in 1969 and later attended Western Connecticut State University. She received an honorary law doctorate from the University of Hartford in 2001.

Rell served as a Connecticut State Representative for the 107th District in Brookfield from 1985 until 1995, when she became Lieutenant Governor after the 1994 election. She won reelection in 1998 and 2002. Her current term expires in January 2007.

Rell is married and has two grown children. In April 2006 she became a grandmother.

In her first months in office, Rell had enormous approval ratings, with a December '04 Quinnipac poll showing her at 80%, the highest rating ever for a governor in Connecticut. She announced in October 2005 she would seek a 4 year term in 2006, and in early 2006 led her Democratic challengers, New Haven Mayor John DeStefano and Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy, by wide margins in public opinion polls. On May 20 Rell was nominated by the Republican Party to seek a full term of her own. Stamford businessman and former state representative Michael Fedele was nominated as her running mate as Lieutenant Governor.

An August 8th Democratic primary will determine Rell's opponent. See also Connecticut gubernatorial election, 2006.

On December 27, 2004, Rell underwent treatment after discovering she was in the early stages of breast cancer. [Rell has long history promoting Breast Cancer Awareness. (2004, Dec. 27)] WTNH

Rell is considered a liberal Republican and a fiscal conservative.

Governor of Connecticut

On April 20, 2005 Rell signed into law a bill that made Connecticut the first state to adopt civil unions for same-sex couples without being directed to do so by a court. The bill was amended to define marriage as "between a man and a woman" after Rell threatened a veto. Rell signed the bill despite some Republican opposition to it, including from the Chairman of the State Republicans at the time.

During Rell's administration, Connecticut carried out the first execution in New England since 1960 when serial killer Michael Ross was put to death on May 13, 2005. Rell, who is a supporter of the death penalty, declined a request by Ross's lawyers to delay the execution in order for the state legislature to debate eliminating the death penalty. Legally, the Governor of Connecticut cannot commute a death sentence. [Rell Feels Pressure on Both Sides Over Execution (2004, Dec. 2)] Associated Press

Rell supported the state's consitutional spending cap against pressure from groups favoring expanded state government to bypass the cap. As a result in late June 2006 the state reported a $910 million surplus for the prior year and the state's Rainy Day Fund exceeded $1 billion in deposits for the first time.

Rell supports a lawsuit in response to the federal No Child Left Behind Act. Connecticut's Attorney General Richard Blumenthal filed the lawsuit against the US Department of Education to force Congress and President George W. Bush to amend the act because, Rell contends, it would compell Connecticut to spend tens of millions to meet acceptable standards. The act requires states to pay for standardized testing every school year, instead of every 2 years. Rell's State Department of Education says the extra testing will provide little new information about students' academic progress.

In 2005, Rell signed into law a Democratic plan to revive the Connecticut estate tax, despite, again, the opposition from most Republicans. The tax applies to estates worth $2 million or more. Critics say the tax will encourage wealthy citizens to leave and take their money with them. In 2006 Rell proposed the phase-out of her own tax, but the Democrat-controlled legislature ignored the proposal.

In 2005 Rell signed into law a campaign finance bill that banned contributions from lobbyists and would provide public financing for future campaigns. The law received support from Arizona Senator John McCain, who campaigned for Rell in Hartford on March 17, 2006.

In June 2006 Rell intervened with New London city officials, proposing that homeowners displaced by the Kelo v. New London court decision be deeded property so they may retain homes in the neighborhood. A settlement was reached with the homeowners on June 30, 2006. [Rell: Deeds For Fort Trumbull Homeowners. (2006, June 2).] Associated Press

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See also

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